The Columbus Dispatch

US consumer spending rises in August

- Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON – U.S. consumer spending accelerate­d in August amide a surge in COVID-19 cases, even as soaring demand and snarled supply chains kept inflation high.

Consumer spending rose 0.8% in August, up from a decline of 0.1% in July. Income rose by a smaller 0.2%, the Commerce Department reported Friday. That suggests consumers dug into their savings to fuel more spending. Americans bought more furniture, clothes, and groceries, while the delta variant caused them to pull back on traveling and eating out.

The report showed inflation stayed high: Consumer prices increased 0.4% in August from July, the same increase as the previous month. In the past year, prices rose 4.3%, up slightly from the previous month and the highest in more than three decades. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core inflation increased 0.3% in August and 3.6% from a year earlier, the same figures as the previous month. The unchanged readings are a sign inflation could be leveling off.

Overall, the data signaled that despite a dent to consumer confidence, Americans are still spending enough to drive the economy forward.

Inflation has risen sharply since the spring, eroding workers' pay gains and raising pressure on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who has said the increase will likely prove temporary. Supply shortages of everything from computer chips to furniture to paint and chemicals have driven up prices as the economy's rebound from the pandemic recession caught many companies flatfooted.

Powell said Thursday that supplychai­n disruption­s, such as jammed ports on the West Coast and factory shutdowns in Asia, have lasted longer than the Fed expected.

Powell said he expected supply chain problems to start improving next year, which would start to push inflation lower in the first half of 2022.

There are early signs that spending picked up further in September, as new COVID-19 cases have started to wane. Spending on airline tickets increased in late September and total credit-card spending rose in mid-september from a month earlier, according to a Bank of America report.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE ?? Additional demand combined with supply shortages kept inflation high.
NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE Additional demand combined with supply shortages kept inflation high.

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