2026年3月13日 / 美国东部时间上午10:32 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
新的政府经济数据显示,2025年最后三个月美国经济增长显著弱于此前报告的水平。
美国商务部周五表示,该国国内生产总值(GDP,即美国生产的商品和服务的总价值)在第四季度的年增长率仅为0.7%,远低于去年11月的预估。
而对于2025年全年经济,GDP增长率为2.1%,虽仍保持稳健增长,但低于最初预估的2.2%,也不及2024年的2.8%。
政府停摆影响
美国商务部数据显示,去年年末的美国政府停摆严重冲击了经济增长,联邦支出和投资以16.7%的速度大幅下降,这使第四季度经济增长减少了1.16个百分点。
同样在周五发布的通胀数据显示,1月份消费者价格温和上涨,这表明即便在伊朗战争推高能源价格之前,物价上涨的压力就已持续存在。经济学家表示,这两份报告共同表明,美国经济可能不如此前认为的那样能够抵御逆风(包括已推高部分商品价格的关税)。
“新数据意味着当前经济状况可能比我们所知的更加脆弱。要知道,这是1月份的数据,而过去几周发生了很多事情,”NerdWallet高级经济学家伊丽莎白·伦特尔(Elizabeth Renter)在电子邮件中表示,“2月份就业报告疲软以及伊朗战争爆发前通胀仍高于目标,都为经济潜在的脆弱性埋下了伏笔。”
通胀加剧
美国商务部周五在其个人消费支出(PCE)报告中称,1月份个人消费支出价格同比上涨2.8%,略低于12月的增幅。该报告因去年秋季的六周政府停摆而延迟发布。
剔除波动较大的食品和能源类别后,核心价格同比上涨3.1%,较上月的3%有所上升,为近两年来最高水平。
“最新的个人消费支出通胀数据表明,即便在中东危机爆发前,通胀形势就已不容乐观,”卡森集团首席宏观策略师索尼·瓦尔加塞(Sonu Varghese)在电子邮件中表示。
“随着能源冲击的持续,通胀只会进一步走高,”瓦尔加塞补充道。
美联储的困境
鉴于伊朗战争导致油价急剧上涨,外界普遍预期美联储在下周二的会议上可能会维持基准利率不变。
PCE数据还显示,经通胀调整后,1月份消费者支出相对持平,但商品支出有所下降。
“对美联储而言,这是‘左右为难’的局面:顽固的通胀不利于降息,而需求可能走弱又发出了早期预警信号,”惠誉评级美国经济主管奥卢·索诺拉(Olu Sonola)表示,“美联储可以对部分经济增长放缓的迹象置之不理,但通胀反弹严重限制了其政策调整空间,可能导致货币政策在未来数月陷入停滞。”
编辑:阿兰·谢特(Alain Sherter)
美联社对本文亦有贡献。
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/how-rising-diesel-price-may-affect-inflation-amid-iran-war/
Economic growth late last year was much weaker than previously thought
March 13, 2026 / 10:32 AM EDT / CBS News
New government economic data shows that U.S. economic growth was significantly weaker in the final three months of 2025 than previously reported.
The nation’s gross domestic product — the total value of goods and services produced in the U.S. — expanded at a meager 0.7% annual pace in the fourth quarter, the Commerce Department said Friday. That is half the 1.4% growth rate the agency initially estimated last month.
For all of 2025, GDP grew at a 2.1% pace, representing solid growth, yet down from an initial estimate of 2.2% and slower than the 2.8% growth recorded in 2024.
Shutdown hit
The U.S. government shutdown late last year severely impacted economic growth, with federal spending and investment plunging at a 16.7% rate, the Commerce Department figures show. That hacked 1.16 percentage points off fourth-quarter growth.
Inflation data, also released on Friday, indicates that consumer prices crept higher in January, a sign that costs continued to rise even before the Iran war drove up energy prices. Together, the two reports suggest the economy may not be as resilient to headwinds — including tariffs that have pushed up prices on some goods — as previously thought, economists said.
The new data “means things could be more fragile right now than we know. Keep in mind, this is January data, and a lot has happened in the past several weeks,” said Elizabeth Renter, senior economist at NerdWallet, in an email. “A weaker jobs report for February and inflation that remained above target before the war in Iran began all set the stage for potential fragility.”
Flaring inflation
Prices rose at a 2.8% annual rate in January compared with a year earlier, the Commerce Department said Friday in its personal consumption expenditures (PCE) report. That’s slightly below December’s increase, in a report that was delayed by last fall’s six-week government shutdown.
Excluding volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose at a 3.1% pace, up from 3% in the prior month and the highest in nearly two years.
“The latest personal consumption expenditures inflation data tells us that the inflation picture wasn’t looking good even before the Middle East crisis,” Sonu Varghese , c hief macro strategist at Carson Group, said in an email.
Inflation “is only going to head higher as the energy shock comes through,” Varghese added.
Fed conundrum
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged when officials meet next week, given the sharp rise in oil prices due to the Iran war.
The PCE data also showed that consumer spending was relatively flat in January after adjusting for inflation, while spending on goods decreased.
“For the Federal Reserve, this is the worst of both worlds: stubborn inflation that argues against cutting rates, paired with potentially fragile demand that is flashing early warning signs,” Olu Sonola, head of U.S. economics at Fitch Ratings. “The Fed can shrug off pockets of weakening growth, but resurgent inflation severely limits its room to maneuver, leaving policy potentially stranded for months.”
Edited by Alain Sherter
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/how-rising-diesel-price-may-affect-inflation-amid-iran-war/
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