You might have heard in the news might have heard that the US economy has contracted in the first quarter of 2022. When we talk about economic contraction or expansion, we look at the % change in the most widely used statistic to measure the overall economic health of a country, also known as the GDP. Many were surprised by this decline, and it’s said as the worst quarter since the pandemic started in March 2020. To know more about what GDP is, please click here.
The official source of publishing GDP numbers in the US is the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In their April 28, 2022 press release, they projected an annual 1.4% decline in the real Gross Domestic Product of Q1 2022 vs a growth projection of 6.9% in Q4 2021. If you want to see the details about the calculation, data, and assumptions, you can check this page here. https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gross-domestic-product
What were the reasons for this decline?
The main reason that made the GDP growth negative was the trade deficit, meaning imports were far more than our exports, as US domestic supply couldn’t keep up with the domestic demand. In addition to the trade deficit, the GDP was also deflated by the omicron variant of COVID that shut down some businesses, and the government-funded pandemic relief to businesses and households decreased or stopped altogether by the first quarter of 2022.
Should we worry about this slowdown?
Despite the projection, economists are saying that there is no reason to panic yet because this GDP decline happened due to the net export component. In the chart below, data collected from BEA shows the percent shares of each of the four main contributors to the US GDP in the 2022 Q1.
The two major contributors to the US GDP have been consumption and investment, and both remained strong. Consumption, which is the most important driver of the US economy (contributing to almost 70%) increased during the first quarter at a rate of 2.7% annually, compared to 2.5% during the fourth quarter of 2021. Similarly, the business investment such as capital expenditure on factories, equipment, software, etc. remained robust and hence should increase productivity for the remainder of 2022. Firms’ investment had grown at a rate of 9.2% in the first quarter of 2022 which is a significant increase from the 2.9% increase in the last quarter of 2021.
In summary, even though the GDP first quarter fell, it is not indicating a recession coming. A recession is defined as a fall in GDP in two successive quarters. And we may only hope for a better future and some happy news in the economy.