The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Consumer confidence rises despite omicron

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON » U.S. consumer confidence rose this month as Americans shrugged off concerns about rising prices and COVID-19’s highly contagious omicron variant.

The Conference Board, a business research group, said Wednesday that its confidence index — which takes into account consumers’ assessment of current conditions and the their outlook for the future — rose to 115.8 in December, the highest reading since July.

Consumers’ view of current conditions dipped slightly, but their outlook for the next six months brightened. Their expectatio­ns for inflation dropped this month — perhaps because gasoline prices have fallen in recent weeks — even though the government reported prices rose in November at the fastest year-overyear rate since 1982.

“Despite high inflation and the rising Omicron wave, consumers are bullish on 2022,” said Robert Frick, economist with Navy Federal Credit Union. “This reflects growing economic momentum, as job openings remain high and prices are dropping at the pump. This is further evidence that consumer spending will keep rising and be the main factor fueling the expansion.”

It was the first reading taken since COVID-19’s omicron variant started spreading rapidly around the world, threatenin­g the economic reocvery from last year’s recession.

“Looking ahead to 2022, both confidence and consumer spending will continue to face headwinds from rising prices and an expected winter surge of the pandemic,” said Lynn Franco, the Conference Board’s senior director of economic indicators.

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