The Arizona Republic

US consumer spending up 8.2%

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their spending in May despite a 4.2% decline in personal income, which had soared by 10.8% the previous month. Income had jumped in April on the strength of billions of dollars in support through government payments in the form of unemployme­nt aid as well as one-time $1,200 stimulus checks. In May, those stimulus checks were no longer counted as income for most people.

Besides the unemployme­nt aid states are providing to the 30 million jobless Americans, the federal government is providing $600 a week in additional benefits. The federal money has pumped nearly $20 billion a week into the economy and enabled many of the unemployed to stay afloat. But the $600 a week in aid will expire after July, and Trump administra­tion officials have said they oppose an extension.

Without the stimulus checks or an extension of unemployme­nt aid, it’s unknown whether consumers will keep spending freely. In testimony to Congress last week, Federal Reserve Jerome Powell said he thought lawmakers should consider providing some form of extended unemployme­nt benefits beyond their typical six-month period, on the assumption that joblessnes­s will likely still be quite high by year’s end.

Last month’s rise in consumer spending also coincides with a sudden surge in coronaviru­s cases that’s forcing states and businesses to consider scaling back or even reversing the reopenings. If an escalation of the pandemic does force another round of widespread business shutdowns, fewer people would shop, travel, eat out or attend large events.

That would reverse any rebound in spending and would further weaken the economy.

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