The U.S. economy expanded at a 1.9 percent annual rate in the first three months of the year, a weak pace that few economists see changing much this year.
The Commerce Department on Thursday made no change in its third and final estimate for growth in the January-March quarter. Slower growth in consumer spending was offset by faster growth in businesses investment, leaving the overall pace the same.
A sluggish job market and diminished consumer and business confidence have kept the economy from accelerating in the April-June quarter. Most economists say growth has likely stayed roughly the same.
Growth of around 1.9 percent typically generates roughly 90,000 jobs a month. That's too weak to lower the unemployment rate, which was 8.2 percent last month.
The government offers three estimates for gross domestic product, or GDP, which is the output of all goods and services. It includes everything from a cup of coffee to production of military jets.
Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of economic activity. It grew at a 2.5 percent rate in the first quarter, slightly below the previous 2.7 percent estimate.
Some economists are hopeful that consumer spending could rise in the second half of the year. Lower gas prices should give Americans more money to spend on vacations, furniture, meals out and other discretionary purchases.
But some analysts warn that without more hiring and better pay increases, most Americans could hunker down and spend less.
A closely watched private survey released this week showed consumer confidence fell in June for the fourth straight month. The Conference Board said worries about the job market outweighed lower gas prices and steady improvement in the housing market.
Employers have added an average of just 73,000 jobs a month in April and May. That followed average gains of 226,000 a month in the first three months of the year.
And U.S. manufacturing activity, which has helped drive growth since the recession ended three years ago, has weakened.
Factories produced less in May than April, the Federal Reserve said earlier this month. Automakers cut back on output for the first time in six months. In June, manufacturing activity barely grew in the New York region and contracted sharply in the Philadelphia area, according to surveys by regional Federal Reserve banks.
Europe's debt crisis has dampened demand for U.S. exports. And consumers barely increased their spending at retail businesses in May and April.
There are some hopeful signs that things are improving. U.S. factories received more orders for long-lasting manufactured goods in May, while a key measure of business investment plans rose.
And the housing market is looking a little better. Home sales are up from last year, home prices are rising in most cities, and homebuilders are planning to break ground on more projects in the next 12 months.
Still, the Federal Reserve has downgraded its forecast for the year. It now expects growth of just 1.9 percent to 2.4 percent for 2012. That's half a percentage point lower than its previous estimate in April. And it thinks the unemployment rate won't fall much further this year.