Year-end growth spurt not likely to be repeated

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The burst of energy the economy showed at the end of last year isn't likely to be repeated anytime soon.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that the economy grew at a 5.6-percent pace in the October-to-December quarter in
its third and final estimate of economic activity during the period.

Even though growth turned out to be a tad less than the government's prior two estimates for the quarter, the new reading
still marked the strongest showing in six years.

Many economists, however, think the economy has slowed in the current quarter to about half the pace seen at the end of last
year.

Why won't the big growth spurt be repeated? Because the main force behind it is already ebbing.

Most of last quarter's growth came from a large bump up in manufacturing—but not because consumer demand was especially
strong. In fact, consumer spending weakened at the end of the year, even more than the government previously estimated, contributing
to the slightly lower reading on overall economic growth.

Instead, factories were churning out goods for businesses that had let their stockpiles dwindle to save cash. If consumer
spending remains lackluster as expected, that burst of manufacturing—and its contribution to economic activity—will
fade.

Analysts predict the economy will expand at only a 3-percent pace in the first quarter of this year. The next two quarters
should log similar growth, they say.

In normal times, such growth would be considered respectable. But the nation is emerging from the worst recession since the
1930s. Sizzling growth in the 5-percent range would be needed for an entire year to drive down the unemployment rate, now
9.7 percent, by just 1 percentage point.

Unlike past rebounds driven by the spending of shoppers, this one is hinging more on spending by businesses and foreigners.

Businesses in the fourth quarter boosted spending on equipment and software at a pace of 19 percent, the most in 11 years.
Foreigners snapped up U.S.-made goods and services at a pace of 22.8 percent, which propelled exports to grow at the fastest
pace since 1996. Both export growth and spending on equipment and software turned out to be stronger than the government's
previous estimate last month.

The slower drawdown in businesses' stockpiles accounted for nearly 4 percentage points of the fourth-quarter's overall
growth.

But consumers didn't spend as much.

They increased their spending at a pace of just 1.6 percent. That was weaker than the government's prior estimate and
was down from a 2.8-percent growth rate in the third quarter.

Although consumer spending is shaping up to be somewhat better in the current quarter, Americans aren't in the mood to
go on a spending spree, one of the reasons why the pace of the recovery will be more subdued than in the past. High unemployment,
sluggish wage gains, hard to get credit and record-high home foreclosures are all expected to keep consumers relatively cautious
in the spending.

The government first estimated that the economy grew at a 5.7-percent pace in the fourth quarter. Then last month it boosted
that estimate to a 5.9-percent pace. On Friday it shaved it a bit, mostly reflecting slower consumer spending as well as more
weakness in the commercial real-estate market.

Economists had expected that the fourth-quarter reading would stay at 5.9 percent.

Still, the new reading of 5.6-percent growth marked a big improvement from the 2.2-percent growth rate logged in the third
quarter. That's when the economy started growing again after a record fourth straight quarters of declines.

As government stimulus wanes and Federal Reserve economic-support programs end, the economy—especially the fragile
housing market—could suffer.

Improvements in the housing market tailed off at the end of the year—despite massive government support. There are
fears the housing recovery could stall out once a homebuyer tax credit ends in the spring and the Fed stops a mortgage-securities
buying program that has lowered mortgage rates and boosted sales.

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