* U.S. economy suffers biggest fall in seven years
* Consumer spending pullback key factor in GDP setback
* Analysts warn contraction to be deep and prolonged (Recasts, adds background, analysis, details; updates market reaction)
By Glenn Somerville
WASHINGTON, Oct 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. economy suffered its sharpest contraction in seven years in the third quarter as consumers cut spending and businesses reduced investment at the onset of what may be a severe and long-lasting recession.
The Commerce Department said on Friday that U.S. gross domestic product shrank at a 0.3 percent annual rate as the sharpest pullback by consumers since 1980 overwhelmed the benefit from ramped-up government spending.
"This is just the beginning of contraction," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University who says the fourth quarter will certainly show another decline to meet the traditional definition of recession as back-to-back quarters of falling activity.
A drop in GDP had been widely expected and the decline was not as great as feared, easing the angst of investors who bid U.S. stocks up on hopes interest-rate cuts by central banks around the globe can ward off a deep downturn.
The latest negative economic news came just four days before U.S. voters select the next president, with Democratic candidate Sen. Barack Obama leading his Republican rival Sen. John McCain in the polls.
While the White House conceded the economy had "weakened substantially," it insisted measures it has initiated, like a plan to buy troubled mortgage assets from banks, should help ease credit-market woes, which have cast a cloud worldwide.
Paul Ashworth, senior U.S. economist for London-based Capital Economics Ltd, said he now expects the U.S. economy to shrink 1.5 percent next year, with no growth in 2010.
"Overall, we expect the level of GDP to shrink by a total of 2.5 percent, which would make this one of the worst recessions since the Great Depression," Ashworth said.
CONSUMER FALTERS
Speaking in Florida, Obama said McCain would continue the policies of President George W. Bush, which had landed the economy in trouble. "George Bush has dug a deep hole for us and he wants to hand the shovel to John McCain," he said.
McCain adviser Carly Fiorina said the data was no surprise and the Republican candidate had the right economic prescription. "I think that people have been expecting it now that we would be going into a recession for some time," she told reporters in Ohio, adding that lower capital gains taxes and investment incentives were needed to spur job creation.
The third-quarter contraction was a striking turnaround from the second quarter's relatively brisk 2.8 percent rate of growth, a pace supported by a shot of government stimulus.
Consumer spending, which fuels two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, fell at a 3.1 percent rate in the third quarter -- the first drop since the closing quarter of 1991. Spending on nondurable goods -- items like food and paper products -- shrank at the sharpest rate since late 1950.
Heavy government spending and still-strong export growth helped mask the extent of deterioration in other sectors.
"The bad news is the private sector was doing really badly," said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts. "Consumer spending, equipment and software, residential -- the whole private side was very weak."
STRESS MOUNTS
Continuing job losses, coupled with declines in the value of stocks and homes, have put consumers under severe stress.
The report showed that disposable personal income dropped at an 8.7 percent rate in the third quarter -- the steepest on records dating to 1947 -- after economic stimulus payments helped push it ahead at an 11.9 percent clip in the second quarter.
Separately, the Labor Department said weekly claims for new unemployment benefits continued at a lofty 479,000 last week, a level that signals weak hiring prospects.
The U.S. economy has shed jobs in each of the last nine
months, with about 750,000 lost so far. On Thursday, American
Express
Mass layoffs -- involving 50 or more people -- hit their highest level since September 2001 last month.
In the third quarter, spending on durable goods like cars and furniture fell at a 14.1 percent annual rate, the steepest drop since the beginning of 1987, while businesses cut investment spending for the first time since the end of 2006.
In contrast, federal government spending shot up at a 13.8 percent annual rate, the strongest gain since the second quarter of 2003 when the war in Iraq began.
Prices rose strongly in the third quarter, with a gauge of prices on items consumers bought up at a 5.4 percent annual rate, the sharpest since early 1990. But oil prices peaked in July and many other commodity prices have also begun to ease, signaling a big shift in the inflation outlook. (Reporting by Glenn Somerville; Editing by Neil Stempleman)