U.S. Economy Surges at <stat>4.3%</stat> Pace, Defying Recession Fears, But Can Consumers Keep It Up?
The U.S. economy grew at a surprisingly strong 4.3% annual rate in Q3, the fastest in two years, driven by robust consumer spending. However, rising inflation raises questions about sustainability.
The U.S. economy expanded at its fastest clip in two years, posting an annualized 4.3% GDP growth in the third quarter that blew past analyst expectations of 3.2%. The surge, fueled by resilient consumer spending, paints a picture of an economy shrugging off inflation and high interest rates, but a closer look reveals potential cracks beneath the surface.
The report, delayed by the government shutdown, shows an economy that has "defied doom and gloom expectations basically since the beginning of 2022," according to Aditya Bhave, senior economist at Bank of America. He described the economy as "very very resilient."
The primary driver was a jump in consumer spending, which rose at a 3.5% annual rate, up from 2.5% in the previous quarter, with households spending more on services like health care. A sharp 7.4% rebound in exports and a rebound in government spending, led by defense, also provided significant boosts. Meanwhile, imports—which are a drag on GDP—continued to decline, a trend some attribute to the tariffs announced by President Donald Trump.
Despite the strong headline number, not all sectors are thriving. The gains helped mask a slowdown in business investment and a housing market struggling under the weight of high interest rates. President Trump celebrated the figures on social media, crediting his tariffs, but some analysts urge caution.
A key concern is rising inflation. The Fed's preferred inflation gauge, the PCE price index, ticked up to 2.8% in the quarter from 2.1% previously. These price increases are weighing on lower and middle-income households, even as their higher-income counterparts continue to spend freely. Oliver Allen, senior U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, warned that more recent data suggests households are pulling back, noting that "the weak labour market, stagnant real incomes, and exhaustion of pandemic-era excess savings all seem finally to be catching up."
While headline spending is strong, it's masking a growing divergence. High-income households are driving the growth, while lower-income consumers are feeling the squeeze from inflation and dwindling savings. This fragility is the key risk to watch.
本内容由AI根据原文进行摘要和分析。我们力求准确,但可能存在错误,建议核实原文。
相关文章
美國2025年第三季GDP年增率達4.3%,創兩年新高,表現優於預期。消費者支出與出口為主要增長動力,但通膨回溫與家庭支出放緩的隱憂亦隨之浮現。
日本第三季GDP下修至年率-2.3%,敲響經濟衰退警鐘。面對困境,日本政府擬推出122兆日圓的史上最大預算。本文分析此舉對市場及投資者的潛在影響。
2025年底前必讀的加密貨幣節稅指南。本文詳解如何利用市場下跌,透過「虧損收割」三步驟沖銷資本利得,並提醒投資者應對2026年報稅新規的關鍵注意事項。
日本三井住友信託集團宣布,將投資高達5.75億美元全資收購馬來西亞的AHAM資產管理公司,此舉旨在深化其在亞洲高增長資產管理市場的戰略佈局。