KEY POINTS
  • Slower-than-expected second quarter growth raises questions about the growth pace in the second half of the year.
  • But even so, the economy has rebounded and is now bigger than it was pre-pandemic and economists mostly expect strong gains in the second half.
  • Covid is still a wild card that could shape the course.
A worker hoists a flight chain at the Calder Brothers' facility in Taylors, South Carolina, U.S., July 19, 2021.

The U.S. economy is now larger than it was before the pandemic, but its growth rate may have peaked this year at a much slower pace than expected.

That doesn't mean the second half of the year won't be strong or the recovery will be derailed. The question is how strong growth can be, with a number of factors that can impact it, including the delta variant of the coronavirus.