Login or register to continue
Or use

US economy grew a sluggish 0.5% in fourth quarter, government says, downgrading previous estimate

Gas prices are displayed at a gasoline station, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Gas prices are displayed at a gasoline station, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Comments 12

WASHINGTON (AP) — The American economy, slowed by last fall’s 43-day government shutdown, grew at a sluggish 0.5% annual pace from October through December, the Commerce Department reported Thursday in downgrade of its previous estimate.

U.S. gross domestic product — the nation’s output of goods and services — decelerated in the fourth quarter after registering impressive growth of 4.4% from July through September and 3.8% from April through June. The latest number was marked down from the Commerce Department’s previous estimate of 0.7% fourth-quarter growth.

Federal government spending and investment fell at a 16.6% annual pace because of the shutdown, lopping 1.16 percentage points off fourth-quarter GDP growth. Consumer spending expanded 1.9%, down a notch from the previous estimate and from 3.5% in the second quarter. Spending on goods — such as cars and clothing — grew just 0.3%, down from 3% in the July-September period.

For all of 2025, the economy grew 2.1% last year, slower than 2.8% in 2024 and 2.9% in 2023.

Business investment, excluding housing, increased at a 2.4% pace, likely reflecting money being poured into artificial intelligence, but the increase was down from 3.2% in the third quarter.

A category within the GDP data that measures the economy’s underlying strength weakened from October through December, growing at a 1.8% clip, down from 2.9% in the third quarter. This category includes consumer spending and private investment, but excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government spending.

The economic outlook for this year is hazy after the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran drove up energy prices and disrupted global commerce.

America’s job market slumped last year — recording the weakest hiring outside a recession since 2002 — but has been up and down so far in 2026: Employers added a healthy 160,000 jobs in January, slashed 133,000 in February, then created a surprising 178,000 in March.

Thursday’s report was the Commerce Department’s third and final estimate of fourth-quarter GDP. The first look at January-March economic growth is due April 30.

Conversation

|
All comments are subject to our Community Guidelines.
Please note that comments are not moderated immediately — every post is reviewed before appearing publicly to ensure it meets our community guidelines. This means there may be a delay before your comment is visible.

All Comments

    1. Comment by CHARLIE83chancla.

      Read Fox News! Putin has taken over a U.S. based company and turned around and used the sale of the business to finance The War? Again, the company is a U.S. BASED BUSINESS! What happens to other companies we have over there?

      • Comment by AJ1.

        Just an observation: the picture being used isn't reflective of the story being told.

        The way this ALWAYS works is the government puts out a "rough draft" at the end of the quarter, an estimate based on educated guesses. Then, after most the rest the data is in, they give us their "revision".

        Most POTUS' accept these changes, up and down, with accountability, dignity and grace, even if, market flows don't GENERALLY have as much to do with govt (we'll definitely see that change based on Iran). Our current President doesn't like negative news like this and will try and spin it to being the fault of undocumented, radicals, unpatriotic, America hating, etc. just to continue to divide and rile.

        • Comment by Carterredzone.

          Quarter 4 ended in December... Gas was going up in late march early April. Why is the article suggesting gas has to do with last year?

          • Comment by Carterredzone.

            Guys this not even political don't even make it about something it's not.... Blame the fed for inflation or blame our market. Don't blame officials who have nothing to do with this...

            notification icon
            Subscribe to our notifications for the latest news and updates. You can disable anytime.