2.2%.
This sounds great on the surface, but it is misleading on the scope because of how the comparison period is from Q4-2009 versus the Q4-period of 2008. It was in September of 2008 that business spending fell off a cliff, and the three months of Q4-2008 were effectively a dead period where business failure seemed at least possible for many of the large corporations. That was also the period where banks could not outlay any cash and when the capital markets had been shut down.
Consumer spending added 1.44% to the number, and that is the largest component of GDP. This also shows that the core inflation rate was 1.4% in the fourth quarter, and the chain-weighted GDP price index rose 0.6%. Housing was a contributor of growth as well on all that tax credit buying in October and November, showing a 5.7% gain in Q4.
It is hard to understand where all the deficit spending is going though, as the government spending on the federal level was up only 0.1%. In the Q3 period that figure was up 8%. Business spending rose 2.9% in the fourth quarter, a remarkable difference from the 5.9% drop in the third quarter. International trade is also higher with a 18.1% gain in exports and a 10.5% gain in imports.
JON C. OGG