South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Consumer spending up 1.4% in September

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — U.S. consumers increased their spending by 1.4% in September, a modest gain but far less than the big increases of late spring, adding to concerns that Americans remain cautious with the coronaviru­s pandemic resurging across the country and impeding the economy.

The gain marked the fifth straight monthly increase in consumer spending, the primary driver of the U.S. economy, since the virus erupted in early spring and flattened the economy. But the recent slight increases reflect an economy weakened by the virus and by the failure of Congress to provide another stimulus package to struggling individual­s and businesses.

Friday’s report from the Commerce Department also showed that income, which provides the fuel for spending, rose 0.9% in September. That followed a drop of 2.5% in incomes in August.

The economy would weaken if consumers, who drive roughly two-thirds of economic activity, start cutting back on spending now that confirmed coronaviru­s cases are accelerati­ng and the stimulus aid that Congress enacted in the spring for businesses, individual­s and laid-workers has expired.

The 0.9% rise in incomes reflected strength in strength in the key component of wages and salaries, gains that reflect continuing employment increases as the labor market climbs back after 22 million jobs were lost in March and April.

Gregory Daco, chief economist at Oxford Economics, said that after an initial burst in spending as the first wave of lockdowns were ending, the prospect for spending going forward is “much grimmer.”

“In the absence of a fiscal stimulus package, slower employment gains will be insufficie­nt to prevent incomes from falling below pre- COVID levels,” he wrote in a research note.

The September report showed that consumer spending on durable goods such as autos shot up 3% in September. Spending on nondurable goods, like food and clothing, rose 1.5%.

By contrast, spending on services increased 1%.

Since the pandemic struck, Americans have been spending freely on goods — from cars and clothing to furniture and sporting goods — while cutting back sharply on purchases in the service sector.

Services, which make up the bulk of the economy, include everything from bars, hotels and restaurant­s to airlines, hair salons and movie theaters. The service industry and its employees have been hard hit by people’s reluctance or inability to shop, travel, dine out or attend entertainm­ent events as they formerly did, a trend that is hampering the overall economy.

Economists generally foresee annual GDP growth of around 5% in the current fourth quarter. But they warn that unless Congress can reach agreement on a new aid package for jobless Americans and small businesses struggling to survive, the economy could suffer a reversal early next year.

The Fed will hold its latest policy meeting next week. The policymake­rs are widely expected to keep their benchmark shortterm rate at a record low near zero in hopes of helping the economy emerge from the pandemic- induced recession.

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