Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Retail sales up 0.9% as consumers show resilience

Spending rises despite persistent high inflation

- Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON – U.S. retail sales rose 0.9% in April, a solid increase that underscore­s Americans’ ability to keep ramping up spending even as inflation persists at nearly a 40-year high.

The increase was driven by greater sales of cars, electronic­s and at restaurant­s, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.

Even adjusting for inflation, which was 0.3% on a monthly basis in April, sales increased. Gas prices fell slightly last month, restrainin­g inflation, after soaring in March in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Consumers are providing critical support to the economy even after a year of seeing prices spiral higher for gas, food, rent and other necessitie­s. The economy contracted in the first three months of the year, but consumer and business spending still increased at a healthy pace.

“‘Never bet against the U.S. consumer’ has always been a good adage,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, a consulting firm, in a note to clients. “Despite the surge in prices weighing on their purchasing power, the U.S. consumer now appears to be single-handedly keeping the global economy afloat.”

The Tuesday report also showed that sales in March were revised much higher, to a gain of 1.4%, from 0.7%. As a result, spending even rose that month after adjusting for inflation, which surged to 1.2% as gas prices rose. The revision suggests the economy likely shrank by less than the 1.4% contractio­n that was reported last month.

The strength of the consumer makes a recession much less likely, at least any time soon, Ashworth said. But it also keeps the pressure on the Federal Reserve to tighten borrowing costs in order to cool the economy.

Strong hiring, rapid wage increases, and a healthy level of savings – on average – have bolstered consumers’ financial health, despite a sharp increase in consumer prices of 8.3% in April compared with a year ago. The increase was just below a four-decade high reached in March.

Still, economists are watching closely to see if consumer spending can continue to outpace inflation. Slower spending would drag down the economy’s growth. While that might bring down inflation, it would also threaten to push the economy into recession.

Inflation is still disrupting many retailers’ businesses, even if sales increase. On Tuesday, Walmart reported an unexpected drop in profit in the first quarter, even as its sales rose. Company executives said rising costs for fuel, food and labor boosted its expenses.

And for lower-income Americans, inflation is taking a harder toll and forcing many people to adjust their spending patterns. Walmart executives told analysts on a conference call on Tuesday that some customers were switching to cheaper store brands from national brands, particular­ly in lunch meats, as they juggled higher costs.

More customers are buying half-gallon jugs of milk, instead of a full gallon, company executives said. Milk prices have leapt 15% in the past year, according to government data.

Separately, Home Depot reported higher sales in its first quarter and raised its profit forecast for this year. Yet much of that increase simply reflected inflation – customer transactio­ns fell 3.9%.

Home Depot’s sales jumped in the pandemic as more people, cooped up at home, undertook home renovation projects, so some pullback was expected as pandemic restrictio­ns fade.

Still, the robust sales figures in the government’s report are also impressive since retail sales covers only about onethird of consumer spending, with the rest going to services such as travel, haircuts and health care. Airlines and hotels are also reporting strong sales as more people are taking trips after postponing travel for two years.

The retail sales figures suggest that some supply chain snarls may be easing. Sales at auto dealers rose 2.2%, and they increased 1% at electronic­s stores and 0.7% at furniture stores.

Purchases at online retailers jumped 2.1% and they climbed 2% at restaurant­s and bars.

The ongoing strength of consumer demand, fueled by a robust labor market, is a key reason the Federal Reserve has accelerate­d its efforts to tighten credit and cool the economy. By doing so, Fed Chair Jerome Powell hopes to bring down inflation without causing a recession.

The Fed lifted the short-term benchmark interest rate it controls by a halfpoint at a policy meeting earlier this month, double its usual increase. Powell has also signaled the Fed will likely undertake the fastest pace of interest rate increases in 33 years to bring inflation to heel.

Several factors are enabling consumers to keep spending even as prices soar. Wages and salaries have been rising rapidly as businesses, struggling to fill a record-high number of open jobs, have been forced to offer more generous paychecks.

Average hourly earnings, excluding those of managers, rose 6.4% in April from a year earlier, one of the fastest annual increases in four decades. While that is below the rate of inflation, in some industries workers’ inflation-adjusted wages are rising.

In April, hourly pay for workers in restaurant­s, bars, hotels and entertainm­ent industries – excluding managers – jumped 11% from a year earlier. That’s above the 8.3% rate of inflation that month.

Strong hiring also boosts spending simply by increasing the number of people earning paychecks. Employers have created 2 million jobs this year as the unemployme­nt rate has fallen to 3.6%, near a half-century low.

And overall, consumers have more cash on hand. Last year’s stimulus checks pumped up Americans’ bank accounts, including lower-income Americans. People also spent less in 2021 on travel, entertainm­ent and eating out. As a result, economists calculate that U.S. consumers have about $2 trillion more in savings than they otherwise would have based on pre-pandemic trends.

 ?? ZALUBOWSKI/AP DAVID ?? Consumers are providing critical support to the economy even after a year of seeing prices spiral higher for gas, food, rent and other necessitie­s.
ZALUBOWSKI/AP DAVID Consumers are providing critical support to the economy even after a year of seeing prices spiral higher for gas, food, rent and other necessitie­s.

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