Trump takes victory lap after strong GDP report, predicts 'we're going to go a lot higher'
- At a news conference Friday, President Donald Trump said he expected the US economy to grow even faster in the second half the year.
- A report released earlier showed that in the second quarter, gross domestic product (GDP) rose at a 4.1% annual rate, the fastest since 2014.
- "These numbers are very, very sustainable," Trump said, countering the opinion of many economists that growth at this pace will not last.
President Donald Trump said Friday that the US economy is likely to accelerate even faster later this year, following a report that showed the strongest growth in nearly four years.
The Commerce Department had earlier reported that gross domestic product (GDP), the total value of goods and services produced in the US, increased at an annual pace of 4.1%, the highest since 2014.
"As trade deals come in one by one, we're going to go a lot higher than these numbers - and these are great numbers," Trump said at a news conference after the report.
He added, "I happen to think we're going to do extraordinarily well in our next report."
Trump said growth during each of the two previous administrations, a period that coincided with the 2008 recession, averaged just over 1.8%.
"By contrast, we are now on track to hit an average GDP annual growth of over 3% and it could be substantially over 3%," Trump said. "Each point, by the way, means approximately $3 trillion and 10 million jobs. Think of that."
Friday's report showed that the US became a $20 trillion economy - the first time any country has hit that milestone.
Trump cast doubt on the chorus of economists who have said that growth at a 3%+ rate is not sustainable. Worker productivity has slowed in recent years, and growth in Q2 was partly boosted by a surge in soybean exports ahead of China's retaliatory 25% tariff on the crop.
"I think the most important thing - and Larry Kudlow just confirmed to me along with Kevin Hassett - is that these numbers are very, very sustainable," Trump said. "This isn't a one-time shot."
A rebound in consumer spending from the first quarter served the biggest contribution to growth in Q2. The April-June period was the first full quarter after the Trump administration's corporate tax cuts were signed.
Personal consumption increased by 4% in the first full quarter after President Donald Trump signed tax cuts into law. Business investment and government spending also increased.
The Commerce Department's report was based on preliminary data, and revisions with more complete data will be released in August and September.
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