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Economy’s slight shrinkage late last year surprises experts

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — The economy’s unexpected contraction at the end of last year showed that “fiscal cliff” fears and a sharp drop in defense spending pushed the moderate recovery off track, highlighting the precarious nature of the country’s economic revival.

The nation’s total economic output shrank at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the last three months of the year, the first such pull-back since the Great Recession ended in mid-2009, the Commerce Department said Wednesday.

Economists were surprised but predicted the drop was a temporary detour that would not send the U.S. veering toward another recession. They pointed out, however, that battles in Washington, including upcoming ones on spending cuts and the debt limit, again could affect consumer and business confidence and economic growth.

Among the factors for the fourth-quarter decline was a 0.6 percent drop in investments by businesses in their inventories amid concerns about the large tax increases and federal spending cuts — dubbed, collectively, the fiscal cliff — that had been set to start Jan. 1.

In addition, federal defense spending dropped 22.2 percent from the previous quarter, the biggest decline in four decades. And with Europe in recession and growth in China slowing, exports decreased 5.7 percent.

Two straight quarters of contraction officially constitute a recession, which would seem to put the U.S. on the precipice of another downturn. But economists said things were not as bad as they seemed.

Some of the key factors in the fourth-quarter slowdown, particularly the falloff in defense spending, appeared to be anomalies. A last-minute deal in Washington avoided most of the tax increases, providing a potential springboard for business investment.

And some key components of the economy, particularly consumer spending and the housing market, showed strength at the end of last year. Such factors should help ease any concerns about falling into another recession.

“I’m sure we will start seeing the use of the dreaded ‘R’ word,” said Justin Wolfers, an economics professor at the University of Michigan and fellow at the Brookings Institution. “That’s premature, and almost certainly wrong.”

Wolfers said the economy still is growing, but he warned that the “recovery is still precarious, and Congress could still blow it up.”

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