The U.S. economy expanded at a healthy pace during the third quarter, a sign of sustained growth fueled by government spending and a narrower trade deficit despite mounting concerns about the health of overseas economies.

Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced across the economy, advanced at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.5% in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had forecast 3.1% growth for the quarter.

The report showed broad-based gains across the economy but also raised questions over whether the pace could be sustained in the last three months of the year. Trade boosted growth as imports fell, while government spending, which has been a drag on growth over the past three years, turned up amid a boost in military spending.

The report showed that inflation-adjusted GDP rose 2.3% from a year earlier. Economic growth during the current expansion has been modest by the country's historical standards, and yet it may prove to be the envy of many other advanced economies.Business investment held steady but consumer spending showed few signs of a big upturn, and housing continues to underwhelm. Those sectors could be particularly important if exports slide amid a rising dollar and slower growth in Europe, Japan or China.

Nick Timiraos And Eric Morath WSJ.com VA Disability Claims Soar

Requests for disability pay by veterans have ballooned during the past five years, overloading many doctors who evaluate the claims and increasing the possibility of fraud, according to current and former VA staff and government watchdogs.

From fiscal 2009 to 2013, the number of medical disability claims received by the Veterans Benefits Administration--a branch of the Department of Veterans Affairs--climbed 44%. The number of doctors called upon to evaluate the claims rose only 22%, according to the VA.

"Claims are coming in a lot faster than what the VA is able to handle," said Daniel Bertoni, a director at the U.S. Government Accountability Office, which investigates federal spending. A March 2013 GAO report found that claims jumped 29% from 2009 to 2011 but the agency processed only 6% more.

A VA spokeswoman said its processing of claims is "within standards" for both time and quality. She said the agency contracts with additional employees when needed and can call on other VA clinicians to help process claims "without delay."

Daniel Huang The Wall Street Journal Longevity Dogs Pensions

Good news for Americans: You are living longer.

The bad news: The longer lifespan doesn't bode well for the corporate pension plans that are supposed to support workers into old age.

New mortality estimates released last week by the nonprofit Society of Actuaries show the average 65-year-old U.S. woman is expected to live 88.8 years, up from 86.4 in 2000. Men age 65 are expected to live 86.6 years, up from 84.6 in 2000.

Longer lives for retirees may add to a squeeze at many pension funds already struggling to plug funding gaps and force companies to contribute more to cover future obligations.

The estimates also are expected to accelerate a shift away from defined-benefit pension plans that offer guaranteed payouts, said Rick Jones, a partner at consultant Aon Hewitt.

Companies being hit with rising insurance premiums and longer-living retirees also are expected to unload the risks of running a pension plan by offering workers lump-sum pension buyouts or selling those liabilities to insurance companies.

One such deal came in September, when Motorola Solutions agreed to transfer about $3.1 billion in pension obligations and their risk to Prudential Financial, and to purchase a group annuity contract from the insurer.

That and other related moves are expected to roughly halve Motorola's retirement obligations.General Motors and Verizon Communications have struck similar arrangements, which worry some retirees, because their benefits no longer carry a backstop from the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.

Dan Fitzpatrick The Wall Street Journal A Migration to Obamacare

Small companies are starting to turn away from offering health plans as they seek to reduce costs and increasingly view the health law's marketplaces as an inviting and affordable option for workers.

In the latest sign of a shift, WellPoint said last week that its small-business-plan membership is shrinking faster than expected and it has lost about 300,000 people this year, leaving 1.56 million in small-group coverage.

During a call with analysts to discuss third-quarter earnings, the No. 2 insurer said it had projected a five-year migration to "significantly reduce" small-employer membership, but it now thinks the drop-off will be compressed into two years.

Going forward, with the health law's marketplaces running and functioning well, small employers will likely re-evaluate exchanges as an option for their employees, said Wayne DeVeydt, WellPoint's chief financial officer. "We think [that] will become even probably a more prominent decision that they'll make this quarter," he said.

Other insurers have flagged a similar trend. Aetna Chief Financial Officer Shawn M. Guertin said the company is seeing "some erosion at the bottom of the market" among employers with two to 10 workers. Kaiser Permanente is seeing "some contraction" in the small-group market, particularly in places where insurers are offering cheap individual plans, said Joe Smith, the nonprofit's vice president for small business.

Angus Loten, Anna Wilde Mathews, And Christopher Weaver The Wall Street Journal High-Density Coach Class

If you think flying economy is miserable now, just wait.

Delta, United, American, Southwest and other airlines have installed new "slim-line" seating--with trim metal frames and ultrathin cushions--squeezing rows closer together to pack more people on each flight. Three-quarters of Delta's domestic fleet and one-quarter of United's now have the seating.

The lightweight seats--and even some new, narrower bathrooms--boost profits, reducing fuel burned per passenger and selling more tickets per flight.

But passengers feel the pinch: Some complain about stiff padding and knee-knocking issues, and liken flying in the new seat to squeezing next to strangers on a crowded park bench. A survey by TripAdvisor of 1,391 travelers who had tried the new seats found 83% said they were less comfortable than traditional seats.

Each row of coach seats used to have 32 or 33 inches of space between seat backs--a metric the industry calls seat "pitch." Now, many big airlines are down to 31 inches of pitch. United goes as tight as 30 inches on some of its Boeing 737s.

And at some airlines, it's going to get worse. In September, Boeing announced the launch of new, denser seating on 737s called 737 MAX 200, aimed at low-cost airlines. The new MAX 200 version will be built with additional emergency exits and fitted with 200 seats. The current version typically has 160 seats and is capped at a maximum 189 for safety reasons. Seat pitch on the new version will be as tight as 28 inches, the company says.

Regulators deal with seat space in tests of safety, not comfort.

A Boeing spokeswoman says the new seats give passengers "more leg room than the previous generation of seat designs" and make high-density planes possible.United, Delta and others say coach improvements such as video-on-demand and Wi-Fi help compensate for tighter seating.

Scott McCartney The Wall Street Journal

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