US consumer spending
slowed in March, income rose
FILE - In this Nov.
25, 2011 file photo, shoppers... ((AP Photo/Daily News, Joe Imel, File))
WASHINGTON—Americans increased their
spending more slowly in March, a sign that scant pay increases may be causing
consumers to become more cautious.
Their spending rose
0.3 percent last month, just one-third the increase in February.
Slow wage growth
and softer consumer spending gains are the latest evidence that the economy
might be weakening after a strong first two months.
Economists say a
warm winter made the economy look better because it caused some activity that
normally occurs in spring—from hiring to home sales—to occur in January and
February. That made March's gain smaller.
A more troubling
factor in the long run is that Americans are receiving little or no pay raises.
"Real" income—income adjusted for inflation—has been growing too
slowly to sustain healthy increases in consumer spending, many economists say.
After-tax income
rose just 0.6 percent in the first three months of 2012 compared with a year
earlier. That was the smallest gain in two years.
"Real incomes
will need to grow at a faster rate to prevent consumption growth from
slowing," said Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics.
Before the Great
Recession, a healthy gain in consumer spending was between 5 percent and 6
percent a year. March's increase was roughly half that pace.
And if income,
adjusted for inflation, continued to grow at March's rate, the annual growth
would be roughly 2.5 percent. While that's better than a decline, economists
consider it a weak figure.
The U.S. economy
depends on consumer spending for roughly 70 percent of activity. Many people
have been increasing their spending by saving less.
For the full
January-March quarter, consumer spending rose at an annual rate of 2.9 percent,
the fastest pace in more than a year. The increase was a bright spot in an
otherwise sluggish quarter. Dales noted that spending in January and February
drove the quarterly increase.
Without better pay,
that trend isn't sustainable. The savings rate edged up to 3.8 percent in
March, after dropping to a 30-month low of 3.7 percent of after-tax income in
February.
And income,
adjusted for inflation, inched up just 0.2 percent after declining for two
straight months.
In the
January-March quarter, the economy grew at an annual rate of 2.2 percent. That
was down from a 3 percent annual growth rate in the October-December period.
The weakness mainly reflected slower gains in government spending and weaker
business investment.
An inflation gauge
tied to consumer spending rose a modest 0.2 percent in March. Over the past 12
months, the index has risen just above the Federal Reserve's 2 percent
inflation target
A healthy job
market could reinvigorate consumers because more jobs mean more money to
s(pend. But the economy created just 120,000 jobs in March—half the pace of the
previous three months.
Economists predict
that employers will have added 163,000 jobs this month, below the pace from
December through February.
One positive change
since the winter: Gas prices appear to have peaked. That would give consumers
more to spend elsewhere.
The nationwide
average for a gallon of regular gasoline stood at $3.83 on Friday, down eight
cents from a month ago, according to AAA's fuel gauge report.Please feel free to comment to any of the posts on this blog. The intent is to start discussions on the subject content. If you have articles for post or comments about the blog in general please contact: Thank you Preferred Logistics----------- www.preferredlogistics.biz
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