美国第一季度经济增长或回升,但消费者支出可能降温


2026-04-30 04:02:43 UTC / 路透社

作者:露西娅·穆蒂卡尼

2026年4月30日 世界协调时4:02 更新于3小时前
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人们在美国内华达州拉斯维加斯威尼斯人度假赌场购物中心行走,2025年11月18日摄。路透社/丹·科尔/档案照片

  • 内容摘要
  • 国内生产总值预计将以2.3%的增速增长
  • 政府支出在停摆后的反弹将成为预期增长回升的主要动力
  • 消费者支出预计进一步放缓,通胀削弱了民众购买力

华盛顿,4月30日(路透社)——在一场严重的政府停摆后,美国经济增长可能因政府支出反弹而在第一季度加速,但此次回升预计将是短暂的,因为美国与伊朗的冲突推高了汽油价格,挤压了家庭预算。

路透社对经济学家的调查显示,上一季度国内生产总值的预期增长还将反映出企业设备投资的强劲增长,这一增长由人工智能支出热潮以及支撑该技术的数据中心建设所推动。

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不过,市场预计美国商务部周四公布的第一季度国内生产总值初步预估数据将显示,即便在美国与以色列联手对伊朗发动打击之前,消费者支出就已经失去了进一步增长的动力。此次冲突已将美国平均汽油价格推高至每加仑4美元以上。

“我们仍处于相对缓慢的增长模式中,没有什么亮眼的表现,”波士顿学院经济学教授布莱恩·贝瑟恩说道。“没有什么能真正燃起增长的大火。只有一些余烬,却看不到火焰。”

路透社对经济学家的调查预测,上一季度国内生产总值年化增长率可能达到2.3%。预估区间从萎缩0.2%到增长3.9%不等。

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该调查是在周三的数据公布之前完成的,数据显示,剔除飞机订单后的非国防资本财订单——这一指标被视为企业支出的密切追踪指标——3月份跃升了3.3%。不过,进口导致商品贸易逆差大幅扩大,部分抵消了这一增长,尽管部分进口产品最终成为了企业仓库中的库存。

经济增长率在去年10月至12月当季放缓至0.5%。联邦政府支出的缩减拖累经济增长1.16个百分点,为1994年第一季度以来的最大降幅。

经济学家预计政府支出将出现部分反弹,预计上一季度整体政府支出至少为GDP增长贡献了整整一个百分点。他们认为,只要劳动力市场没有恶化,这种温和的增长速度足以让美联储维持利率不变,甚至可能维持到2027年。

美联储周三将基准利率维持在3.50%至3.75%的区间,同时指出对通胀的担忧日益加剧。

“在当前环境下,美联储目前无需采取任何行动来支撑劳动力市场,”PNC金融集团首席经济学家格斯·福彻说道。“他们可以在2026年剩余时间以及2027年维持当前利率水平,直到我们对伊朗局势、能源价格以及劳动力市场的变化有更清晰的认识。”

第一季度就业平均每月新增6.8万个岗位,而去年同期的月均新增岗位为2万个。与2023年和2024年相比,劳动力市场已明显放缓,部分经济学家将此归咎于唐纳德·特朗普总统的贸易和移民政策,称这些政策降低了劳动力需求和工人供给。

疲软的劳动力市场抑制了工资增长。尽管向官方通胀数据的传导幅度相当温和,但关税仍推高了部分商品的价格。经济学家表示,消费者一直依靠储蓄或减少储蓄来维持支出,他们称这种情况不可能无限期持续下去。2月份储蓄率为4.0%。

消费者支出预计走弱

占经济总量三分之二以上的消费者支出增速预计将进一步放缓,低于第四季度1.9%的增长率。路透社的一项调查预测,个人消费支出价格指数上一季度将以3.8%的速度增长,而第四季度的增幅为2.9%。该指数是美联储为实现2%通胀目标而追踪的通胀指标之一。

经济学家警告称,更高的通胀可能抵消部分预期中的减税刺激效果。退税规模扩大带来的提振预计将很快消退,他们称这将导致今年的消费支出疲软。

“储蓄率下降支撑了消费者支出,但我认为储蓄率不会再继续下降了,”波士顿学院的贝瑟恩说道。“随着通胀上升,实际工资基本持平……没有任何因素能够有力地推动消费者支出增长。”

企业设备支出预计将实现两位数增长,以弥补消费者支出的疲软。但除了与人工智能相关的投资外,由于工厂等非住宅建筑持续疲软,企业支出可能不会如此亮眼。

人工智能支出热潮带动了进口增长,导致贸易逆差扩大,这可能拖累了上一季度的GDP增长。由于消费者支出放缓,部分进口商品最终进入了仓库,库存的积累可能削弱了贸易逆差带来的负面影响。

由于高抵押贷款利率继续抑制住房市场,住宅投资预计连续第五个季度出现萎缩。经济学家预计,中东地区的冲突将从第二季度开始拖累经济增长。

“我们预计这场冲突对经济的拖累将在第二季度达到峰值,消费者可自由支配支出将受到最严重的冲击,”全国金融市场经济学家奥伦·克拉钦说道。“存在损害可能蔓延到下半年的风险。”

露西娅·穆蒂卡尼 华盛顿报道;保罗·西马奥 编辑

我们的标准:汤森路透信托原则。

US growth likely picked up in first quarter, but consumer spending probably cooled

2026-04-30 04:02:43 UTC / Reuters

By Lucia Mutikani

April 30, 2026 4:02 AM UTC Updated 3 hours ago

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People walk through a shopping mall at The Venetian Las Vegas resort, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., November 18, 2025. REUTERS/Daniel Cole/File Photo

  • Summary
  • Gross domestic product forecast to increase at 2.3% rate
  • Post-shutdown rebound in government spending to account for much of anticipated pickup
  • Consumer spending projected to have slowed further as inflation reduces spending power

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) – U.S. economic growth likely accelerated in the first quarter on a rebound in government spending after a crippling government shutdown, but the pickup is expected to be short-lived as the war with Iran drives up gasoline ​prices and squeezes household budgets.

The anticipated increase in gross domestic product last quarter also would reflect robust growth in business investment in equipment, fueled by an artificial intelligence spending ‌boom and the building of data centers underpinning the technology.

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The Commerce Department’s advance estimate of first-quarter gross domestic product on Thursday is, however, expected to show consumer spending losing further momentum even before the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran raised the average U.S. gasoline price to above $4 a gallon.

“We remain in relatively slow growth mode, nothing exciting,” said Brian Bethune, an economics professor at Boston College. “There’s nothing really to get a good fire going. There are some warm embers, but there is no fire ​out there.”

GDP growth likely increased at a 2.3% annualized rate last quarter, a Reuters survey of economists predicted. Estimates ranged from a 0.2% pace of contraction to a 3.9% growth rate.

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The survey ​was concluded before data on Wednesday showed non-defense capital goods orders excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending, jumped 3.3% in March. That rise was ⁠partially offset by a sharp widening in the goods trade deficit because of imports, though some of the products ended up as inventory at business warehouses.

Economic growth slowed to a 0.5% pace in the October-December quarter. ​A contraction in federal government outlays lopped off 1.16 percentage points, the most since the first quarter of 1994.

Economists expected a partial reversal, with overall government spending estimated to have contributed at least a full percentage point ​to GDP growth last quarter. They believed the moderate growth pace would be sufficient for the Federal Reserve to hold interest rates steady, possibly into 2027, as long as there was no deterioration in the labor market.

The U.S. central bank on Wednesday left its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 3.50%-3.75% range, noting rising concerns about inflation.

“In the current environment they don’t need to do anything right now to support the labor market,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial. “They can keep ​rates where they are through the rest of 2026 and into 2027 until we get a better picture of what happens with the situation in Iran and energy prices and what’s happening with the labor ​market.”

Employment growth averaged 68,000 jobs per month in the first quarter compared to the monthly gain of 20,000 during the same period last year. The labor market has slowed significantly compared to 2023 and 2024, with some economists blaming President ‌Donald Trump’s trade ⁠and immigration policies, which they said had reduced labor demand and the supply of workers.

The soft labor market has cooled wage growth. Tariffs have raised prices of some goods, even though the pass-through to official inflation numbers has been fairly moderate. Economists said consumers have relied on savings or been saving less to maintain their spending, which they said could not continue indefinitely. The saving rate was 4.0% in February.

WEAKER CONSUMER SPENDING ANTICIPATED

Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy, is expected to have slowed further from the fourth quarter’s 1.9% growth rate. A Reuters survey forecast the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index increased at a ​3.8% rate last quarter after rising at a 2.9% ​pace in the fourth quarter. That index is ⁠one of the inflation measures tracked by the Fed for its 2% inflation target.

Higher inflation could offset some of the anticipated stimulus from tax cuts, economists warned. The boost from larger tax refunds was expected to fade soon, leading to what they said would be weaker spending this year.

“The saving rate went down to support ​consumer spending and I don’t think it’s going to go down any further,” said Boston College’s Bethune. “With the increase in inflation, real wages are pretty ​much flat … There’s nothing here ⁠that is going to propel consumer spending meaningfully.”

Double-digit growth is anticipated for business spending on equipment, taking the slack from consumer spending. But outside the AI-related investments, business spending was probably not as spectacular amid ongoing weakness in non-residential structures like factories.

The AI spending boom is pulling in imports, leading to a widening in the trade deficit that likely subtracted from GDP growth last quarter. With some of the imports ending up in warehouses because of ⁠slowing consumer spending, ​the hit from the shortfall was probably blunted by the accumulation of inventories.

Residential investment is expected to have contracted for a ​fifth straight quarter as high mortgage rates continue to stifle the housing market. Economists expect the war in the Middle East to weigh on economic growth from the second quarter.

“We see the conflict’s drag on the economy peaking in the second quarter, with consumer discretionary ​spending among the most adversely impacted,” said Oren Klachkin, financial market economist at Nationwide. “There is a risk the damage could spill over into the second half of the year.”

Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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