Friday's gross domestic product report
confirmed what a drag government can be: While consumer spending grew
at a 2.9 percent clip, state and local governments cut back spending by
1.2 percent on an annualized basis and the federal government pulled
back by 5.6 percent.
As a result, the GDP
number showed just a 2.2 percent improvement. The
report disappointed economists, some of whom had the number as high as 3
percent and beyond, and cast an uncertain future on a stock market
dependent on Federal Reserve stimulus for growth.
"None
of this is all that surprising, so where is the miss?" wondered Brown
Brothers Harriman global currency strategist Marc Chandler, after noting
some fairly pedestrian and in-line quarterly growth results. "Contrary
to what passes as conventional wisdom, the main drag is coming from the
government itself."
Before
anyone starts thinking that Washington suddenly has gotten religion on
spending, the bulk of the federal government cuts came from defense
spending, which plunged 8.1 percent.
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