The US Economy Continues to Grow Strong with Higher Consumer Spending and Business Investments

US economic growth for the previous quarter sees slight upward revision to a robust annual rate of 3.4%

The US economy experienced a 3.4% annual growth rate from October through December, as announced by the government on Thursday. This was an upgrade from the previous estimate of 3.2% growth in the final quarter of the year. Despite facing higher interest rates, the economy’s growth was driven by increasing consumer spending, exports, and business investments in various sectors.

This marks the sixth consecutive quarter where the US economy has grown at an annual rate above 2%. For the entire year of 2023, the US economy recorded a growth rate of 2.5%, which was an improvement from the 1.9% growth in 2022. In the current January-March quarter, the economy is expected to grow at a slower but still respectable annual rate of 2.1%, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s forecasting model.

Despite multiple interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve to combat inflation, the economy has continued to grow, with consistent job growth and a gradual decline in inflation rates. The combination of steady economic growth and diminishing inflation has raised hopes that the Federal Reserve may achieve a “soft landing” by curbing inflation without causing a recession. The report released on Thursday was the Commerce Department’s final estimate of fourth-quarter GDP growth, with the first estimate of January-March growth set to be released on April 25th.

The revised measure of gross domestic product (GDP) by Commerce Department confirmed a slight deceleration from last quarter’s rapid expansion rate of 4.9%. However, this did not dampen optimism about future economic prospects.

In conclusion, despite facing higher interest rates and inflation concerns,

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