Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

February spending dips, but consumer rebound expected

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Martin Crutsinger of The Associated Press and by Reade Pickert of Bloomberg News (WPNS).

U.S. household spending declined in February and incomes fell as the initial boost from stimulus checks at the start of the year faded, the Commerce Department reported Friday.

Spending fell sharply as severe winter storms disrupted shopping in many parts of the country and the government wrapped up distributi­on of $600 relief payments.

However, activity is expected to rebound strongly this month as more people are vaccinated and flush with a second round of pandemic aid, this time $1,400 individual payments.

Consumer spending fell 1% last month, the biggest drop since April when spending tumbled 12.4% as the country was broadsided by the global pandemic.

Goods outlays fell 3.3% in February. Spending on services declined 0.1%. While nominal outlays for utilities and health care picked up, spending on food services declined.

Severe weather could also have affected wages and hours worked as a host of retailers and restaurant­s temporaril­y closed amid the

winter storms, and snow and ice kept many Americans from leaving their homes throughout various regions.

Incomes fell a record 7.1% last month, a period when the government was completing the bulk of the payments from December’s $900 billion relief bill.

Temperatur­es are rising with the arrival of spring, meaning consumers will be growing more active, and the Treasury Department reported this week that it had made 127 million payments totaling $325 billion in the first two weeks after President Joe Biden signed the latest economic support package totaling $1.9 trillion.

“With $1,400 stimulus checks making their way into bank accounts, health conditions improving and weather warming up, U.S. consumers look ready for a spring bloom,” said Gregory Daco, chief U.S economist at Oxford Economics.

Consumer spending, which is closely watched because it accounts for 70% of economic activity, jumped 3.4% in January. Personal incomes, which provide the fuel for future spending, surged 10.1% the same month as the U.S. doled out $600 checks.

All the government support and ultralow interest rate policies from the Federal Reserve have raised concerns that inflation could take off as the economy opens up. A price gauge tied to spending that is followed by Fed officials showed an increase of 1.6% over the 12 months ending in February, up from a 1.4% gain in January.

Much of that increase reflected rising energy costs.

The core price index, which excludes more-volatile food and energy costs, was up 1.4% for the 12 months ending in February, down from a 1.5% gain in January. The inflation readings remain below the Fed’s 2% target for annual price increases and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell repeated this week that any rise in inflation this year should be temporary.

In addition to the boost from another round of stimulus checks, economists believe spending will be supported this year by the buildup in household savings over the past year as consumers stayed away from restaurant­s and canceled vacations. The government reported that personal savings totaled $2.41 trillion, with the saving rate, saving as a percentage of after-tax income, at 13.6%.

The overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, grew at an annual rate of 4.3% in the fourth quarter, capping a year when gross domestic product plunged by 3.5%, the biggest annual setback in more than seven decades.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said he expects gross domestic product fueled by strong consumer spending will grow at an annual 5.1% this quarter followed by quarterly growth rates continuing to rise for the rest of the year, giving the economy 6% growth for all of 2021, the strongest performanc­e in 37 years.

“It will be a boom year,” Zandi said. “The economy will be helped by an end to the pandemic which will make people feel comfortabl­e about going out, along with massive support from the federal government and pent-up demand from consumers.”

A separate report from the Commerce Department showed the U.S. merchandis­e-trade deficit widened to the biggest on record in February as imports dropped from an all-time high and exports retreated by a larger margin.

 ?? (AP/Mark Lennihan) ?? Shoppers roam a Bed, Bath and Beyond store earlier this week in New York. Winter storms in much of the country helped push consumer spending down 1% in February.
(AP/Mark Lennihan) Shoppers roam a Bed, Bath and Beyond store earlier this week in New York. Winter storms in much of the country helped push consumer spending down 1% in February.

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