The US economy looked surprisingly resilient in 2025, according to GDP data the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released on February 20. But that surface strength may be hiding a few cracks: Economic growth might be resting on the AI boom and spending among higher-income consumers. And monthly PCE data suggests the Fed won’t be cutting benchmark interest rates any time soon. 2025 GDP looks solid: For 2025, inflation-adjusted, or real, GDP was up 2.2%, compared with 2.8% growth in 2024. Consumer spending and investment drove the gains, the BEA said. “Zooming out to 2025, growth clearly cooled, but given the policy whiplash, coming in above 2% looks better than it had any right to,” Olu Sonola, head of US economics at Fitch Ratings, said in a note, according to Bloomberg. Q4 growth weak: The advance estimate of real GDP growth for Q4 2025, meanwhile, came in at a tepid 1.4%, less than the 2.5% increase that analysts from Dow Jones predicted and lower than a survey of Bloomberg economists anticipated, and far below Q3’s 4.4% growth. But the Q4 dip may need an asterisk next to it, analysts said, because the quarter’s results were heavily affected by the 43-day government shutdown. The BEA estimated that the shutdown depressed economic growth by about one percentage point. “Strip out the shutdown drag and growth looks closer to 2.5%, with the US consumer still carrying the load and AI-linked investment doing real work,” Sonola said. Keep reading.—CV |