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U.S. Consumer Spending: Impossible Contradictions

Feb. 26, 2010 11:38 AM ETSPY, DIA, AGG11 Comments
Daryl Montgomery profile picture
Daryl Montgomery
2.82K Followers

Consumers are the key to any U.S. economic recovery since they account for around 70% of GDP. Revised 2009 fourth quarter GDP figures just released indicate that consumer spending rose 1.7% on an annualized basis. This was after a reported 3.8% rise in the third quarter. These numbers are certainly good and indicate an economy on the mend if they are accurate. Unfortunately, there is little likelihood that they are.

To spend more money, consumers have to have more money. They can get the extra money through higher compensation (such as wages), larger interest and dividends payments, by drawing down savings or by being given additional credit. All of these numbers for 2009 indicate that consumers had less money to spend. According to BEA (Bureau of Economic Analysis) figures updated as of February 26, 2010 and the latest Federal Reserve credit statistics, the following changes took place during 2009:

Employee Compensation -- Down 3.2%
Interest Income -- Down 4.9%
Dividend Income -- Down 16.4%
Revolving Credit -- Down 9.5% (mostly Credit Cards)

Consumers not only had less income and credit available, they also saved more. The U.S. savings rate went up from 3.8% at the end of 2008 to 4.1% at the end of 2009. So consumers earned less money and then on top of that they saved more of that smaller amount of money. Their borrowing power dropped as well. Yet, while this is happening the government keeps reporting consumer spending is going up. There seems to be some sort of contradiction here.

The recent GDP figures indicate that this mystery can be explained by a huge drop in personal tax payments in 2009. The government claims that individual taxes dropped 25.8% during the year, an amount that is much, much bigger than the decline in income and which occurred during a period when there was

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Daryl Montgomery profile picture
2.82K Followers
Daryl Montgomery is the organizer of the New York Investing meetup, a 8,000 member educational group that provides the public with unbiased stock, bond, currency and commodity market information. For details, see: http://ow.ly/Y6CNhT (it's free to join). The group is the largest investing meetup in the world. It holds monthly general meetings, offers small classes on investing topics, has webinars and provides individual tutoring. Montgomery, a former professor and expert witness in court cases on data reliability (up to the Supreme Court), has written a number of books on investing and 800+ articles on financial topics. He was formerly the chief blogger for the "Helicopter Economics Investing Guide". He has done extensive research on optimal use of technical indicators. Montgomery has never worked for, nor has any association with any Wall Street company and this allows him to bring an independent perspective to market analysis.The New York Investing meetup's strength is in calling market turns. It called the top in gold and silver in March 2008 and the exact day of the oil bottom in February 2009 and almost the exact peak price in Silver in 2011. The New York Investing meetup now has a monthly market newsletter that provides a global analysis of stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities. It can be purchased on a monthly basis.

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