Washington: In its worst performance in a decade, the US economy contracted by 4.8 per cent in the first quarter due to the coronavirus pandemic that has forced a near shut down of the country, according to the latest governmental advance estimates released on Wednesday.
The decline in the first quarter GDP was, in part, due to the response to the spread of the COVID-19, as governments issued "stay-at-home" orders in March, said the Bureau of Economic Analyses (BEA) of the US Department of Commerce.
"This led to rapid changes in demand, as businesses and schools switched to remote work or cancelled operations, and consumers cancelled, restricted, or redirected their spending," it said.
The sharpest contraction of the American economy in a decade is expected to get worse in the second quarter. In the fourth quarter of 2019, real GDP increased 2.1 per cent, it said.
According to the BEA, the full economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic cannot be quantified in the GDP estimate for the first quarter of 2020 because the impacts are generally embedded in source data and cannot be separately identified.
Over the weekend, White House senior economic adviser Kevin Hassett said that they expected second-quarter negative GDP growth between minus 15 and minus 20 per cent.
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