Boston Herald

Consumer borrowing drops $18.3B

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WASHINGTON — U.S. consumers reduced their borrowing for a third straight month in May as the millions of jobs lost because of the coronaviru­s pandemic made households less eager to take on new debt.

The Federal Reserve reported Wednesday that consumer borrowing declined by $18.3 billion in May, a drop of 5.3%. Borrowing had fallen 4.5% in March and then plunged 20.1% in April. That was the biggest one-month decline in percentage terms since the end of World War II.

Borrowing by consumers in the category that covers credit card debt fell $24.3 billion in May following April’s record $58.2 billion decline. Borrowing in the category that covers auto loans and student debt rose $6 billion, reversing part of a $12 billion decline in April.

Consumer borrowing is closely watched because of clues it can provide about the willingnes­s of households to take on more debt to support consumer spending, which accounts for 70% of U.S. economic activity.

Economists believe that the widespread shutdowns triggered by efforts to contain the coronaviru­s pushed the economy into a deep downturn, with the gross domestic product expected to post a recordbrea­king decline of 30% in the April-June quarter.

The Trump administra­tion is forecastin­g a sharp rebound in the July-September quarter but private economists are worried that the resurgence of coronaviru­s cases in recent weeks in many areas may put the recovery at risk.

 ?? AP FILE ?? LIVING ON A BUDGET: U.S. consumers reduced their borrowing for a third straight month in May due to millions of jobs lost amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
AP FILE LIVING ON A BUDGET: U.S. consumers reduced their borrowing for a third straight month in May due to millions of jobs lost amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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