San Antonio Express-News

U.S. consumer spending up even as inflation rises

- By Reade Pickert

American consumers — the U.S. economy’s main engine — showed little hesitation on spending last month despite the fastest inflation in three decades, setting up the economy for a year-end growth spurt.

Purchases of goods and services, unadjusted for changes in prices, increased 1.3 percent, the most since March, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Even after accounting for higher prices, spending still exceeded projection­s in a sign that consumers started their holiday shopping early.

The figures, the main course of a pre-thanksgivi­ng data feast that included robust orders for business-equipment, a surge in exports and a pickup in new-home sales, help explain why several economists upgraded their tracking estimates for fourth-quarter economic growth.

The reports further complicate matters for Federal Reserve policy makers, who are trying to balance rapid inflation and a labor market still 4 million jobs shy of pre-pandemic levels. Mary Daly, president of the San Francisco Fed bank, is the latest official to suggest a faster tapering of the central bank’s asset-purchase program may be needed.

The personal consumptio­n expenditur­es price gauge, which the Federal Reserve uses for its inflation target, rose 0.6 percent from a month earlier and 5 percent from October 2020. After adjusting for higher inflation, spending rose a healthy 0.7 percent as outlays for both goods and services picked up.

“The combinatio­n of higher inflation risks and consumer resiliency means that the likelihood of the Fed accelerati­ng the pace of taper has increased substantia­lly,” Bloomberg Economics’ Anna Wong and Eliza Winger, wrote following the report.

Economists at Jpmorgan Chase & Co. revised up their fourth-quarter GDP tracking estimate to an annualized 7 percent from 5 percent following Wednesday’s data. Morgan Stanley economists took their running forecast up to 8.7 percent from 3 percent, while Capital Economics now expects 6.5 percent growth.

That’s not to say the economy is without challenges. Robust demand is further straining supply chains and inflation has driven a collapse in consumer sentiment. Moreover, a pickup in Covid-19 cases in recent weeks risks restrainin­g activity through the winter.

Worker pay

Meantime, wages and salaries rose 0.8 percent in October after a 0.9 percent increase, the Commerce Department’s report showed. A host of companies, including Macy’s and Sherwin-williams, are raising wages and boosting perks in a war for talent.

If wage growth is sustained at the current pace, “spending can remain torrid even without new government help and in the face of rapid inflation,” Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities, said in a note.

Personal income climbed 0.5 percent even as government assistance to workers during the pandemic subsided further. The saving rate — or personal saving as a share of disposable income — fell to 7.3 percent, more in line with pre-pandemic readings and signaling Americans have less of a cushion.

Disposable personal income, or after-tax income adjusted for inflation, fell for a third month, dropping 0.3 percent in October. Inflation-adjusted spending on merchandis­e rose 1 percent last month, while outlays for services increased 0.5 percent, the report showed.

The core price index, which excludes food and energy, rose 4.1 percent from a year ago, the most since 1991. Looking ahead, inflation is expected to surge even higher in the coming months as persistent supply chain challenges and ongoing hiring difficulti­es push prices higher.

 ?? Spencer Platt / Getty Images ?? Shoppers enter a store in Manhattan last week in New York City. As Americans begin their holiday shopping early this year in an effort to avoid shortages of some goods, U.S. retail sales surged 1.7% last month, the largest gain since March.
Spencer Platt / Getty Images Shoppers enter a store in Manhattan last week in New York City. As Americans begin their holiday shopping early this year in an effort to avoid shortages of some goods, U.S. retail sales surged 1.7% last month, the largest gain since March.

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