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Delta Variant Slows Economy, But Output Still Better Than Pre-Pandemic Levels

Last Updated November 1, 2021

The economy continued to grow in the third quarter of 2021, but at a slightly slower pace than previous quarters due to the delta variant of COVID-19. New data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) show that Q3 was the economy’s lowest-performing quarter of the year, yet gross domestic product (GDP) is still higher than it was before the pandemic.

The economy has surpassed its pre-pandemic level

Real (inflation-adjusted) GDP grew by an annual rate of 2.0 percent in the third quarter of 2021, according to the BEA. Looking at the quarter in isolation (without annualizing the growth), the economy grew by 0.5 percent, which was approximately the same as the growth rate in the fourth quarter of 2019 — the last quarter before the pandemic started.

The economy continued to grow in Q3, but at a slower rate

The growth of GDP in the third quarter was driven by an increase in private investment (11.7 percent higher than the previous quarter) that mostly resulted from growth in intellectual property products. Personal consumption was also up by 1.6 percent last quarter; that growth reflects an increase of 7.9 percent in spending on services such as transportation and healthcare but a decrease of 9.2 percent in purchases of goods.

Though the delta variant has slowed growth over the last three months, overall our recovery in the past year is cause for optimism, as the rebound in economic output has been much quicker than witnessed in the last recession. New COVID-19 cases are now falling and consumer confidence is increasing, which leaves economists feeling optimistic about the state of the economy for the end of the year. The labor market is also recovering, though there are ongoing concerns that the recovery is not equally distributed, particularly for Black, Hispanic, and Asian workers.

The economic recovery from the recession related to COVID-19 has been much more rapid than from the 2007 recession

As we continue to emerge from the pandemic, and as policymakers turn their eyes towards longer-term issues, they should keep in mind that our nation has a significant, existing fiscal imbalance that predates the pandemic, and strengthening our fiscal outlook for the years ahead is a necessary element of positioning America for its next chapter.

 

Image Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

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