US Q4 economic growth figures revised downwards

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The Commerce Department has revealed that the world’s no.1 economy grew at a slower rate in the fourth quarter than previous estimates showed.

According to official figures, the US economy grew by an annualised 5.6% between the October and December period, rather than the 5.9% and the 5.7% previously estimated.

For the whole of 2009, GDP fell at an unrevised 2.4% – this represented the largest full-year contraction since the 10.9% fall after the Second World War.

The Commerce department said the revisions were attributed to weaker personal and Government consumption, and lower investment.

“The pickup in real GDP also reflects rebounds in business investment in equipment and software and in net exports,” the Commerce Department said.

In related news, and an area crucial to the recovery of the US economy, the housing market appears to be struggling after the Commerce Department said new single-family home sales fell by 2.2% on the month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 308,000 units – the lowest since records commenced in 1963.

Furthermore, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) revealed a fall in sales of previously owned homes in the US for the month of February.

The industry body said sales fell 0.6% in the month to an annual rate of 5.02 million units (an eight-month low), down from 5.05 million the previous month.

February’s fall was the third consecutive month sales had declined and have raised concern that the market may be heading for a double dip in both activity and prices.

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