U.S. Q4 2025 Real GDP Growth Revised Slower
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
Summary
- Q4 GDP growth revised to 0.5% q/q saar from 0.7% in the first revision and 1.4% in the advance report.
- The shutdown of the federal government still played a critical role in the slowdown, subtracting 1.0%-point from Q4 growth.
- Domestic demand slowed further with final sales to private domestic purchasers revised down to 1.8% from 1.9% in the first revision and 2.4% in the advance report.


The third estimate of Q4 2025 GDP showed that real GDP growth slowed to 0.5% q/q saar versus 0.7% in the second estimate and 1.4% in the advance estimate. GDP had grown 4.4% in Q3. The more than one-month long shutdown of the federal government continued to have been a notable restraint on GDP growth in Q4, subtracting 1.0%-point from overall growth, the same as in the second estimate.
Revisions were very small across major expenditure categories. Growth of personal consumption expenditures was revised down slightly to 1.9% q/q saar from 2.0% previously. Nonresidential fixed investment increased 2.4%, up slightly from the 2.2% reported in the second estimate. The 0.5% q/q decline previously reported for residential investment was revised to a larger decline of 1.7%, subtracting 0.1%-point from overall growth versus 0.0%-point in the previous estimate. Inventories declined more than previously estimated, reducing their contribution to growth from 0.3%-point in the second estimate to 0.1%-point in today’s estimate.


There were slight downward revisions to the declines previously reported for both exports and imports, leaving net exports essentially unrevised. As already noted, a 16.6% q/q saar plunge in federal government spending (revised down slightly from -16.7%) accounted for most of the weakness in Q4. This included a 24.3% q/q collapse in nondefense spending, the second largest quarterly decline in nearly forty years. By contrast, state and local government spending increased 1.5%, revised up from 1.2% in the previous estimate.
Private domestic demand growth (final sales to private domestic purchasers, a favored gauge of demand by the Federal Reserve) was revised slower to 1.8% q/q saar in Q4 from 1.9% in the second estimate and 2.4% in the advance report. However, even the revised pace of growth is respectable and close to the economy’s potential growth rate.
The GDP data can be found in Haver’s USECON and USNA databases. USNA contains virtually all of the Bureau of Economic Analysis detail in the national accounts. The Action Economics consensus estimates can be found in AS1REPNA.


Sandy Batten
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Sandy Batten has more than 30 years of experience analyzing industrial economies and financial markets and a wide range of experience across the financial services sector, government, and academia. Before joining Haver Analytics, Sandy was a Vice President and Senior Economist at Citibank; Senior Credit Market Analyst at CDC Investment Management, Managing Director at Bear Stearns, and Executive Director at JPMorgan. In 2008, Sandy was named the most accurate US forecaster by the National Association for Business Economics. He is a member of the New York Forecasters Club, NABE, and the American Economic Association. Prior to his time in the financial services sector, Sandy was a Research Officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Senior Staff Economist on the President’s Council of Economic Advisors, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy at the US Treasury, and Economist at the International Monetary Fund. Sandy has taught economics at St. Louis University, Denison University, and Muskingun College. He has published numerous peer-reviewed articles in a wide range of academic publications. He has a B.A. in economics from the University of Richmond and a M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from The Ohio State University.





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