Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US consumer spending rebounds

Federal relief funds allow many to step out

- Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON – Bouncing back from months of retrenchme­nt, America’s consumers stepped up their spending by a solid 2.4% in January, the sharpest increase in seven months and a sign that the economy may be poised to sustain a recovery from the pandemic recession.

Friday’s report from the Commerce Department also showed that personal incomes, which provide the fuel for spending, jumped 10% last month, the biggest gain in nine months, boosted by cash payments that most Americans received from the government.

The January spending increase followed two straight monthly spending drops that had raised concerns that consumers, who power most of the economy, were hunkered down, too anxious to travel, shop and spend. Last month’s sharp gain suggests that many people are growing more confident about spending, especially after receiving $600 federal aid checks.

“The economy weakened late last year as the fiscal support faded and the pandemic intensified, but now it seems to be coming back to life,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

The government also reported Friday that inflation by a measure preferred by the Federal Reserve rose a moderate 0.3% in January. That left prices up just 1.5% over the past 12 months, well below the Fed’s 2% target.

Besides receiving cash payments, many Americans who have managed to keep their jobs have also been saving money for several months rather than spending. That could bode well for the economy later this year, once consumers increasing­ly feel willing to spend, vaccinatio­ns are more widely administer­ed and some version of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic aid proposal, which includes additional cash payments for individual­s, is enacted.

Concerns that a strengthen­ing economy will accelerate inflation have sent bond yields surging. On Thursday, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note moved above 1.5% – a level not seen in more than a year and far above the 0.92% it was trading at only two months ago.

That move raised alarms on Wall Street and ignited a deep selloff in the stock market. Some investors fear that rising interest rates and the threat of inflation might lead the Fed to raise its benchmark short-term rate too quickly and potentiall­y derail the economy.

In testimony to Congress this week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell downplayed the inflation risk and instead underscore­d the economy’s struggles. Layoffs are still high. And 10 million jobs remain lost to the pandemic that erupted nearly a year ago.

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