Current:Home > ScamsAmericans are saving less and spending more. Could that raise the risk of recession? -TradeWisdom
Americans are saving less and spending more. Could that raise the risk of recession?
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:20:00
Americans are socking away less of their paychecks each month so they have more cash to spend.
The strategy has supported their purchases, and the economy, in recent months, but it’s bound to run out of steam this year as households look to beef up their stockpiles of cash, forecasters say. And that could mean weaker consumer spending along with an economy that’s more vulnerable to a slowdown or even a recession.
Consumption makes up about 70% of U.S. economic activity.
The personal saving rate, the share of income that Americans are squirreling away, was 3.8% in January, well below the recent peak of 5.3% last May and the roughly 7% share before the pandemic, according to data from the Commerce Department.
Historically, the saving rate has averaged about 6.2%, says Gus Faucher, chief economist of PNC Financial Services Group.
Protect your assets: Best high-yield savings accounts of 2023
Faucher expects consumers to respond to their skimpier wallets by saving more this year. “It’s going to be a drag on consumer spending growth in 2024,” he says.
In January, spending grew a modest 0.2%, down from 0.7% the previous month, Commerce said.
Contributing to a more frugal outlook: This year is expected to be a record-breaker for retirements, with more Americans than ever turning 65 and shifting from paychecks to Social Security and pensions.
Cynthia Woltjer, 65, of Indianapolis, says she and her husband have been spending less since recently retiring. This year, they’re eating out about twice a month instead of weekly and meticulously sticking to grocery shopping lists instead of making impulse purchases like chicken or pork.
Those overhead kitchen lights and summer tops on Amazon that Woltjer covets will also have to wait.
“Inflation has a lot to do with it,” she says. When she was working and earning a salary, “It didn’t bother me as much.”
How has COVID-19 changed our spending habits?
Americans’ saving and spending habits have been highly volatile since the pandemic.
In April 2020, the saving rate peaked at an all-time high of 32% as households banked the first round of the government’s COVID-related stimulus checks but had few places to spend the windfall amid widespread lockdowns.
The saving rate fell sharply to a low of 2.7% in June 2022 as Americans struggled to keep pace with inflation, which peaked at a 40-year high of 9.1% that month. Since then, savings initially rebounded as wage growth picked up and inflation eased. Since last spring, however, it has slowed steadily.
Are Americans feeling better about the economy?
Many Americans have opened their wallets because they’ve grown more confident the nation can avoid a recession despite the Federal Reserve’s sharp interest rate hikes to fight inflation, Faucher says.
Now the prospect of Fed rate cuts this year has lifted the stock market to record highs and is poised to lower borrowing costs, further boosting consumer optimism.
Another reason many people are spending more is that households’ pandemic-related savings, which peaked at more than $2 trillion in 2021, dwindled to just $430 billion by last September, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Low- and middle-income Americans largely have exhausted that cache, forcing them to spend more of their paychecks, economists say.
When the saving rate fell to 3.7% in December, that appeared to reflect Americans loosening their purse strings to buy holiday gifts and other purchases, says Gregory Daco, chief economist of EY-Parthenon. Now that the trend has continued into 2024, Daco says he’s a bit more concerned.
“I think we have to be careful,” he says. "If you’re stretching your budget for the holidays, that’s one thing. If you have to do that to pay for your utilities, that’s a very different thing.”
Are people struggling financially?
Many low- and middle-income households are dipping into savings to pay monthly expenses, Daco says, a development that doesn’t bode well for their spending. Credit card debt is already at a record high and delinquencies are at the highest level since 2011.
How likely is a recession in 2024?
Overall, neither Faucher nor Daco are forecasting that a pullback in consumer spending will trigger a downturn.
As long as incomes continue to grow solidly, the savings rate can increase even as consumption also rises, they say. Sturdy job growth also could keep income and spending rising smartly.
Recession risks have fallen to 36% from 61% last May, according to economists surveyed by Wolters Kluwer Blue Chip Economic Indicators.
But they acknowledge the risk that spending could be weaker than anticipated.
Annual wage growth is expected to slow this year from about 4.5% to closer to 3.5%, which would be consistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation goal.
And average yearly job gains are projected to fall from about 250,000 in 2023 to just under 100,000 this year, according to Moody's Analytics.
veryGood! (2845)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Rapper Bhad Bhabie, who went viral as a teen on 'Dr. Phil,' announces she's pregnant
- Norfolk, Virginia, approves military-themed brewery despite some community pushback
- China-made C919, ARJ21 passenger jets on display in Hong Kong
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Are the products in your shopping cart real?
- FBI to exhume woman’s body from unsolved 1969 killing in Netflix’s ‘The Keepers’
- Marvel mania is over: How the comic book super-franchise started to unravel in 2023
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Five whales came to a Connecticut aquarium in 2021. Three have now died
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- ‘I feel trapped': Scores of underage Rohingya girls forced into abusive marriages in Malaysia
- Wildfires can release the toxic, cancer-causing 'Erin Brockovich' chemical, study says
- New, stronger climate proposal released at COP28, but doesn’t quite call for fossil fuel phase-out
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Two indicted in Maine cold case killing solved after 15 years, police say
- $2 trillion worth of counterfeit products are sold each year. Can AI help put a stop to it?
- Jennifer Aniston says she was texting with Matthew Perry the morning of his death: He was happy
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Jennifer Aniston says she was texting with Matthew Perry the morning of his death: He was happy
Climate talks end on a first-ever call for the world to move away from fossil fuels
Southern California school janitor who spent years in jail acquitted of child sexual abuse
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Colorado cattle industry sues over wolf reintroduction on the cusp of the animals’ release
Inflation cools again ahead of the Federal Reserve's final interest rate decision in 2023
What to do if someone gets you a gift and you didn't get them one? Expert etiquette tips