People shop at a grocery store in Brooklyn on July 11, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP) WASHINGTON, United States— The U.S.
economy expanded at a healthy annual 2.4 percent pace the final three months of 2024, supported by a year-end surge in consumer spending, the government said Thursday in a slight upgrade of its previous estimate of fourth-quarter growth. But it’s unclear whether the United States can sustain that growth as President Donald Trump wages trade wars, purges the federal workforce and promises mass deportations of immigrants working in the country illegally.
Growth in gross domestic product (GDP)— the nation’s output of goods and services — decelerated from a 3.1 percent pace in July-September 2024, the Commerce Department said. For all of 2024, the economy — the world’s biggest — grew 2.
8 percent, down a tick from 2.9 percent in 2023. Consumer spending rose at a 4-percent pace, up from 3.
7 percent in third-quarter 2023. But business investment fell, led by an 8.7 percent drop in investment in equipment.
A drop in business inventories shaved 0.84 percentage points off fourth-quarter GDP growth. A category within the GDP data that measures the economy’s underlying strength rose at a healthy 2.
9 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, slipping from the government’s previous estimate of 3.2 percent and from 3.4 percent in the third quarter.
This category includes consumer spending and private investment but excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government spending. Wednesday’s report showed continued inflationary pressure at the end of 2024. The Federal Reserve’s favored inflation gauge – the personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index – rose at an annual rate of 2.
4 percent, up from 1.5 percent in the third quarter and above the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core PC inflation registered 2.
6 percent, compared to 2.2 percent in the third quarter. Thursday’s report was the government’s third and final look at fourth-quarter GDP.
The outlook is cloudier. Trump’s decision to slap taxes on a range of imports — including a 25 percent tax on foreign autos announced Wednesday — could push up inflation and disrupt investment, hurting growth. READ: Trump announces 25% tariffs on foreign-built vehicles The fourth-quarter showed the U.
S. economy “before the enormous surge in policy uncertainty, particularly trade, took hold and the Trump administration imposed additional tariffs,” wrote Ryan Sweet, chief U.S.
economist at Oxford Economics. “The combination of policy uncertainty, tariffs, and tightening financial market conditions are weighing on growth early this year.” Subscribe to our daily newsletter By providing an email address.
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consumer confidence is sliding sharply over anxiety about both tariffs and inflation, and major retailers are lowering their expectations for the year, saying that customers are already pulling back on spending..
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U.S. economy grew 2.4% in Q4 amid consumer spending surge

WASHINGTON, United States— The U.S. economy expanded at a healthy annual 2.4 percent pace the final three months of 2024, supported by a year-end surge in consumer spending, the government said Thursday in a slight upgrade of its previous estimate of fourth-quarter growth. But it’s unclear whether the United States can sustain that growth as