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US economic growth stays positive | US economic growth stays positive |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The US economy has been boosted by the government's $168bn (£84bn) stimulus package, according to the US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. | |
Official figures showed that gross domestic product (GDP) rose at an annual rate of 1.9% between April and June, up from 0.9%. | |
Mr Paulson predicted that the US economy would get stronger next year "and beyond". | |
However, the figure was worse than expected, sending shares falling. | |
Investors were also concerned that the government had downgraded its estimate of growth in the last three months of 2007 from the previous reading of 0.6% to show a negative growth figure of -0.2%. | |
The US dollar fell across the board, including against the euro and the yen, following the release of the data. | The US dollar fell across the board, including against the euro and the yen, following the release of the data. |
At the current growth rate of nearly 2%, the US economy is only growing at half the rate it was one year ago. | |
'Timely' stimulus | |
We're in a recession. I don't know how they get the 1.9% [figure] in the second quarter Robert Macintosh, chief economist, Eaton Vance Management | |
"Clearly the stimulus plan has supported the US economy during this difficult period and couldn't have been timelier," said US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. | |
Without that extra government spending, which added almost 4% to the economy that quarter, it is feared that growth would have been negative. | |
Analysts are now concerned about what will happen to the US when the benefit of the stimulus package, which gave tax rebates to 130 million households, has passed. | |
The US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he expects the economy to continue growing this year and "to return to stronger growth next year and beyond". | |
However, other international organisations such as the International Monetary Fund have argued that the economy will continue to slow further until 2010. | |
Jobless claims rise | Jobless claims rise |
Some economists believe that the US is already in a recession and the latest unemployment figures have compounded that belief. | |
Figures from the Department of Labor showed that the number of applications for unemployment benefit last week hit a five-year high. | Figures from the Department of Labor showed that the number of applications for unemployment benefit last week hit a five-year high. |
Jobless claims reached 448,000, an increase of 44,000 from the previous week. | Jobless claims reached 448,000, an increase of 44,000 from the previous week. |
"I think the most troubling thing out of all the numbers this morning is the (jobless) claims number. If that doesn't convince people we're in a recession, then nothing will," said Robert Macintosh, chief economist at Eaton Vance Management in Boston. | |
The most common definition of a recession is two consecutive three-month periods of negative growth. | |
Officially in the US, a recession has not taken place until the National Bureau of Economic Research says this is the case, but this decision may not come for two years. | |
"We're in a recession," said Mr Macintosh. "I don't know how they get the 1.9% [growth figure] in the second quarter." |