U.S. Economy Grows at 1.5% Pace in Second Quarter
Commerce also said in its report on gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced, that the economy increased at a revised 2% clip in the first quarter.
The report showed household spending rose at a 1.5% clip from April through June, down from a 2.4% gain in the prior quarter.
Business inventories rose $66.3 billion in the last quarter, contributing nearly a third of a percentage point to GDP growth. Excluding inventories, GDP rose at a 1.2% rate, the weakest pace since the first quarter of 2011. In the first quarter, the comparable figure was 2.4%.
Corporate spending on equipment and software improved, climbing at a 7.2% pace, up from a 5.4% increase in the previous quarter.
Commerce on Friday also revised older figures. The final quarter of last year was revised up to a 4.1% gain, the best performance in almost six years. The fourth-quarter gain was previously reported as 3%.
The department also said that GDP grew 2.5% in the 12 months after the contraction ended in June 2009, compared with the 3.3% gain previously reported.
The GDP estimate is the first of three for the second quarter, with the additional releases scheduled for August and September as more information becomes available.