Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Report: Consumer spending up

- By Mary Hightower Mary Hightower is chief communicat­ions officer at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.

“With pandemic-related government support tapering off, gains in personal income will have to come increasing­ly from a recovery in economic activity. As the pace of reopening slows, those gains will also slow.”

— John Anderson, economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e and the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences

Consumer spending inched upward again while total savings began to shrink in September, according to the monthly personal income and outlays report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

The Oct. 30 report from the BEA, part of the U.S. Commerce Department, showed that personal consumptio­n expenditur­es increased by 1.4% in September, outpacing personal income, which grew by 0.9% from August.

“With pandemic-related government support tapering off, gains in personal income will have to come increasing­ly from a recovery in economic activity,” said John Anderson, an economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e and the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences. “As the pace of reopening slows, those gains will also slow.”

Anderson released a sameday analysis of the report, part of a continuing series of analyses examining the effects of the covid-19 pandemic on the economy.

“With the growth in expenditur­es exceeding growth in personal income, the personal savings rate dipped a bit in September compared to August,” he said. “The personal savings rate in September worked out to 14.3% — its lowest level since March but still about double the typical pre-pandemic rate of saving.”

The personal savings rate is savings as a percentage of disposable personal income.

WHERE THE MONEY WENT

Anderson said consumer spending was fairly broadbased, with growth in nearly all major spending categories. Spending on goods rose 2.2% in September.

“Consumers have shown themselves willing to spend on goods during the pandemic, to some extent as a substitute for foregone travel and recreation spending,” Anderson said. “Barring another round of widespread, pandemic-induced job losses, as in March and April, spending on goods ought to hold up reasonably well.”

Spending on food services gained 1.5% in September. “This was the smallest rate of gain since May. Food service spending in September remained about 12% below the pre-pandemic January level.”

Spending in the hard-hit services sector rose 0.8%. Anderson said “recovery in the service sector continues to progress — but at a slower pace in September than previous months.

COVID CASE COUNTS

As the number of covid-19 cases rises again, “it will be interestin­g to see how consumer spending holds up over the next two or three months,” he said. “Rising covid case counts may well encourage some consumers to increase their social distancing behavior — even without another hard shutdown, which is not out of the question in some jurisdicti­ons — likely undoing some of the recent gains in service sectors like food service and accommodat­ions, transporta­tion and recreation.”

Despite vulnerabil­ities in the services sector, however, Anderson said that any downturn would not be “likely approachin­g the March-May experience.”

See Anderson’s analysis at https://bit.ly/34EoEii. Find other COVID-related economic analyses at https://bit. ly/AR-Ag-Eco-Impacts202­0.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States