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Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Contact: Jeannine Aversa, (301) 278-9003

Gross Domestic Product (Third Estimate),
Corporate Profits (Revised Estimate),
and GDP by Industry, Third Quarter 2021
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.3 percent in the third quarter of
2021, following an increase of 6.7 percent in the second quarter. The increase was revised up 0.2
percentage point from the “second” estimate released in November. The deceleration in real GDP in the
third quarter was led by a slowdown in consumer spending. A resurgence of COVID-19 cases resulted in
new restrictions and delays in the reopening of establishments in some parts of the country. In the third
quarter, government assistance payments in the form of forgivable loans to businesses, grants to state
and local governments, and social benefits to households all decreased. For more details, including
source data, refer to the Technical Note and Federal Recovery Programs and BEA Statistics.
GDP highlights
The third quarter increase in real GDP reflected increases in inventory investment, consumer spending,
state and local government spending, and business investment that were partly offset by decreases in
exports, housing investment, and federal government spending. Imports, which are a subtraction in the
calculation of GDP, increased.
• The increase in inventory investment
primarily reflected increases in wholesale
trade (led by nondurable goods industries)
and retail trade (led by motor vehicle and
parts dealers).
• The increase in consumer spending
reflected an increase in services, led by
“other” services (mostly international
travel), transportation services, and food
services and accommodations. Consumer
spending for goods decreased (led by
motor vehicles and parts).
• The increase in state and local government
spending primarily reflected an increase in
compensation of state and local
government employees (notably, education).
• The decrease in exports reflected decreases in both goods (led by foods, feeds, and beverages) and
services (led by charges for the use of intellectual property). The increase in imports reflected an
increase in services, primarily foreign travel by U.S. residents.
• The decrease in housing investment primarily reflected declines in improvements and new singlefamily structures.
BEA data—including GDP, personal income, the balance of payments, foreign direct investment, the input -output accounts, and
regional economic data—are available at www.bea.gov. E-mail alerts are also available. The “advance” estimate of GDP for the
fourth quarter of 2021 will be released on January 27, 2022.

• The decrease in federal government spending primarily reflected a decrease in nondefense spending
on intermediate goods and services . In the third quarter, nondefense services decreased after the
processing and administration of Paycheck Protection Program loan applications by banks on behalf
of the federal government ended in the second quarter.
Updates to GDP
The update primarily reflects upward revisions to consumer spending and inventory investment that
were partly offset by a downward revision to exports. Imports, a subtraction in the calculation of GDP,
were revised down.
Personal income and saving
Real disposable personal income (DPI)—
personal income adjusted for taxes and
inflation—decreased 4.3 percent in the third
quarter after decreasing 29.1 percent in the
second quarter.
Current-dollar DPI increased primarily
reflecting an increase in compensation of
employees. The increase was partly offset by
a decrease in government social benefits
related to pandemic relief programs, notably
unemployment insurance. Personal saving as
a percentage of DPI was 9.5 percent in the
third quarter, compared with 10.9 percent in
the second quarter.
Corporate profits from current production
Profits increased 3.4 percent at a quarterly
rate in the third quarter after increasing 10.5
percent in the second quarter.
• Profits of domestic nonfinancial
corporations increased 1.7 percent after
increasing 13.8 percent.
• Profits of domestic financial corporations
increased 2.6 percent after increasing 10.9
percent.
• Profits from the rest of the world
increased 11.1 percent after decreasing
1.3 percent.
Corporate profits increased 19.7 percent in the third quarter from one year ago.

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Gross domestic product by industry
Today’s release includes estimates of GDP
by industry, or value added—a measure of
an industry’s contribution to GDP. Private
goods-producing industries decreased 5.5
percent, private services-producing
industries increased 3.9 percent, and
government increased 5.1 percent. Overall,
14 of 22 industry groups contributed to the
third-quarter increase in real GDP.
• The decrease in private goods-producing
industries was widespread, led by
construction.
• The increase in private services-producing
industries primarily reflected increases in
professional, scientific, and technical
services; finance and insurance (led by securities, commodity contracts, and investments);
accommodation and food services; administrative and waste management services (led by
administrative and support services); and information (led by motion picture and sound recording
industries).
• The increase in government primarily reflected an increase in state and local government.

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