The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Consumer spending flat for 2nd month in March

- By Martin Crutsinger AP Economics Writer

U.S. consumers cut back sharply on buying durable goods such as autos in March, leaving overall spending unchanged for a second straight month. A slowdown by consumers was a major reason overall economic growth slowed so sharply over the winter.

Consumer spending was unchanged in March after also being flat in February and posting only a modest rise of 0.2 percent in January, the Commerce Department reported Monday. For the January-March quarter, the sharp slowdown in consumer spending was a key reason growth, as measured by the gross domestic product, slowed to an annual rate of just 0.7 percent, the poorest performanc­e in three years.

Economists believe growth will bounce back in the current April-June period, helped by continued strong job gains, rising wages and increased consumer confidence. Many analysts are looking for a second quarter surge to growth of 3 percent or better and they are forecastin­g growth for the entire year of around 2.3 percent, up from 1.6 percent GDP growth in 2016, the poorest showing in five years.

Analysts believe the bounce back in the current quarter will be helped by job gains, rising wages and increased consumer confidence. But the poor first-quarter performanc­e underscore­d the challenge President Donald Trump faces in lifting economic growth, which has lagged over the nearly eight years of this economic expansion, the slowest in the postwar period.

Trump promised during the campaign to double economic growth to 4 percent or better through a combinatio­n of tax cuts for individual­s and businesses, deregulati­on and tougher enforcemen­t of America’s trade deals. But economists believe that Trump’s growth goal will be hard to achieve given the headwinds the economy faces, with an aging workforce and scant gains in recent productivi­ty.

The March spending report showed that incomes grew a modest 0.2 percent after stronger increases of 0.3 percent

in February and 0.4 percent in January. The combinatio­n of weak spending growth and stronger income growth pushed the saving rate to 5.9 percent of

after-tax income in March, up from 5.7 percent in February.

A key inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve showed a 0.2 percent decline in March while core inflation, which excludes food and energy, fell 0.1 percent, the first decline since

September 2001. For the 12 months ending in March, core inflation has risen 1.6 percent, down from a 1.8 percent increase in February. That performanc­e represente­d a small setback for the Fed’s goal of getting inflation back to annual increases of 2 percent.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New cars are parked on a dealer lot in Pittsburgh. U.S. consumers cut back sharply in spending on durable goods such as autos in March, leaving overall spending unchanged for a second straight month.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New cars are parked on a dealer lot in Pittsburgh. U.S. consumers cut back sharply in spending on durable goods such as autos in March, leaving overall spending unchanged for a second straight month.

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