But the growth spurt still fell short of the optimistic goals President Donald Trump hopes to achieve through tax cuts and regulatory relief.
The Commerce Department said today that growth in the gross domestic product, the economy's total output of goods and services, expanded at a 2.6 per cent annual rate in the April-June quarter. That's more than double the revised 1.2 per cent pace in the first quarter.
The improvement was powered in large part by robust consumer appetite for items such as clothing and furniture.
"Consumers continue to drive the economy's growth, but firmer business investment is also a plus," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. "Weaker housing construction was the only significant drag on growth in the quarter."
Trump campaigned on a pledge to boost growth to rates of four per cent or better. So far, his economic program has not advanced in Congress.
Trump in May put forward a budget for next year that projects growth to steadily advance in the coming years, hitting a sustained pace of 3 per cent annually by 2021.
Also today, the department's Bureau of Economic Analysis issued an annual benchmark revision of its data going back three years.
The revision slightly boosted growth over the past three years, enough to lift the average growth in this recovery, now the third longest in US history, to annual gains of 2.2 per cent, up from the previous estimate of 2.1 per cent.
Much of the strength in the April-June period came from consumer spending, which grew at a 2.8 per cent rate, up from a 1.9 per cent growth rate in the first quarter. Consumer spending accounts for 70 per cent of economic activity.
The economy also benefited far more modest inventory reductions, which was a big drag on first quarter growth.
In the other major categories, business investment in plant and equipment grew at a 5.2 per cent rate. But housing construction tumbled at a 6.8 per cent rate, a payback after an 11.1 per cent surge in the winter due to warmer-than-normal weather. Economists believe housing will resume growing in coming quarters.
The government sector grew at a 0.7 per cent rate, driven entirely by a big jump in defense spending. Domestic federal programs and state and local governments all showed small declines.
Weakness in the first quarter that is followed by a stronger spring expansion has become a familiar pattern in recent years, prompting the government to launch a concerted effort to deal with flaws in the government's seasonal adjustment process.
Even with the spring rebound, analysts believe the economy will be unable to meet the ambitious targets set by Trump.
During last year's presidential campaign, Trump attacked the Obama administration's economic record and said he could jump-start growth through a program of tax cuts for individuals and businesses, regulatory relief, tougher enforcement of trade laws to lower US trade deficits and an increase in spending on infrastructure projects.
But given the fact that the program has failed to advance in Congress, many economists have trimmed their expectations for growth this year, saying any boost from Trump's efforts will not likely show up until 2018.
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