8:20 AM
Consumer spending seen helping quarterly growth
Addison Ray
By Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON | Fri Jan 28, 2011 1:24am EST
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy probably gathered speed in the fourth quarter, with the biggest gain in consumer spending in four years offering the clearest signal yet that a sustainable recovery is under way.
Even with growth quickening, however, progress reducing unemployment has been painfully slow, and the report on U.S. gross domestic product due on Friday will likely be little comfort for millions of unemployed Americans or the Federal Reserve officials on a jobs-creation vigil.
The economy grew at a solid 3.5 percent annual rate in the final three months of 2010, according to a Reuters survey, after expanding at a 2.6 percent pace in the third quarter.
The Commerce Department will release the advance GDP data at 8:30 a.m..
"It will likely show that the recovery has accelerated," said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania.
"Unfortunately we still need to see much stronger growth to begin to really make a dent in the unemployment rate. Right now we are just barely creating enough jobs to stabilize the unemployment rate."
On Wednesday, Fed officials voiced concern that the pace of the recovery was still not strong enough to significantly lower unemployment and reiterated a commitment to a $600 billion stimulus effort through the purchase of government bonds.
The jobless rate has been stuck above 9 percent since May 2009. With the economy's growth potential between 2.5 percent and 2.7 percent, analysts say an expansion rate of at least 3 percent over several quarters is needed to cope with new entrants into the labor market and those who have given up the search for work.
The unemployment rate fell to 9.4 percent in December from 9.8 percent in November.
CONSUMERS STEPPING UP TO THE PLATE
Details of the GDP report are expected to show the economy moving in the right direction. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, is expected to have grown at a rate perhaps as high as 4 percent.
"The handoff from temporary factors to domestic demand is under way. This is what we need for the recovery to be self-sustaining," said Harm Bandholz, chief U.S. economist at UniCredit Research in New York.
Support to growth during the fourth quarter is also expected to have come from business spending on equipment and software, which should notch its seventh straight quarter of growth.
Although businesses have been hesitant to hire, they have used their vast cash reserves to buy new equipment and upgrade their technology. But the pace of investment in equipment and software probably slowed in the fourth quarter.
Government spending is expected to have made a modest contribution to growth.