By Chace Goff
The economy is always a large topic of interest in America,
and for obvious reasons. We, the American people, pride ourselves on being the
richest in the nation and being the best “well-off” of any other nation in the
world. However, the fact that our economy’s recovery from a few years back has
been fairly slow going is nothing close to news.
In the third quarter of 2012, it was reported that there was
a 3.1% growth in GDP. By the fourth quarter, there was a slight drop of 0.1%.
Both private stock building, referring to growth of business inventories, and
federal defense spending dropped 1.3 points from growth.
On January 30 of this year, the Federal Reserve met and
claimed that the pause in the growth of the economy was due to “weather-related disruptions and other transitory factors.” Referring to
the tragic superstorm Sandy which caused extreme devastation to millions of
Americans, especially those living in the east coast states of New York and New
Jersey.
In addition, a huge scare was put on the growth of consumer
spending and business investments upon the dreaded arrival of the variety of
tax-increases and spending cuts at the end of the year known as the fiscal
cliff. Astonishingly, an article from The
Economist stated:
“…those were in fact the strongest sectors of
the economy, growing at a combined brisk 3.3% rate, faster than in the third
quarter. Housing construction and machinery investment were especially robust.”
Although many were relieved to avoid a horrible devastation
that could have been caused by the fiscal cliff, consumer confidence has
definitely been bruised from expired tax cuts on the wealthy and a temporary
payroll tax cut, which overall largely impacts the economy of our country.
Consumer confidence has an enormous factor in the end on the country’s GDP.
This can be explained by the wealth effect: the more perceived wealth an individual
or household has, the more one will buy with their money, therefore affecting
the overall well-being of America.
Also according to the article:
“In March automatic federal spending cuts,
worth some $85 billion this year, kick in if Congress and president cannot
agree on delaying or replacing them, which is looking increasingly unlikely.
Those factors together represent fiscal drag worth some 1.5% of GDP this
calendar year.”
Any American citizen would agree this drag
would be horrible for America’s economy and would be yet another stunt in our
growth. Only time will tell if this is
put into effect, so until then we will all just have to cross our fingers and
hope for the best.
It can be seen from the two charts
that this year has not been our best, but definitely not our worst. Again, as
you can see we’ve come a long way since 2009. That was not the first time we as
a country had struggled economically, and it certainly will not be the last.
There is no concise cycle the economy goes through, but according to a man,
Adam Smith’s, theory, an “invisible hand” will help guide us, and it will
ultimately fix itself.
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