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lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
Against the odds, Americans are still spending | |
By Bryan Mena, CNN | |
Updated: | |
9:29 AM EDT, Tue September 16, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
Americans still opened their wallets last month, despite persistent | |
fears about the economy, a slowing labor market and higher tariffs. | |
Spending at US retailers rose 0.6% in August, the Commerce Department | |
said Tuesday, unchanged from July’s upwardly revised 0.6%. Last | |
month’s figure came in much better than economists’ expectations of | |
a 0.2% increase, according to a poll by data firm FactSet. Retail | |
sales are adjusted for seasonal swings but not inflation. | |
Employers have in recent months as Americans about the economy’s | |
future. President Donald Trump’s widespread tariffs have also began | |
to push up some prices, according to the Consumer Price Index. | |
Yet, US consumers haven’t cut back their spending meaningfully, and | |
they may continue to spend, so long as layoffs don’t surge. | |
Retail spending was up across most categories last month, with online | |
sales and purchases at clothing stores rising the most, increasing 2% | |
and 1%, respectively. | |
The so-called control group of retail sales — a measure that strips | |
out volatile components — rose 0.74% in August, up from July’s | |
0.5% and well above economists’ expectations of a 0.4% increase. | |
Sales last month were down at specialty stores and furniture retailers, | |
falling 1.1% and 0.3%, respectively. Spending at health shops and | |
department stores were both down 0.1% each. | |
“The economy seems to be doing just fine for now and perhaps the | |
slow-down in payroll jobs is one gigantic head fake when it comes to | |
forecasting the economy,” wrote Christopher Rupkey, chief economist | |
at Fwd Bonds, in an analyst note Tuesday. “Consumer spending is | |
resilient. Interest rate cuts do not need to be adjusted as the economy | |
is sailing along just fine.” | |
Spending at restaurants and bars rose 0.7% in August from the prior | |
month, according to the report. | |
Signs of weakness in the economy | |
Consumer spending remains resilient as other parts of the economy | |
sputter. | |
Job growth during the summer , with revised data showing employers shed | |
jobs in June, the first negative employment tally since December 2020. | |
That brought an end to what was the second-longest period of employment | |
expansion on record. Unemployment has also crept up and the number of | |
unemployed people seeking work now outpaces job openings, according to | |
Labor Department data. | |
Meanwhile, consumer sentiment is sliding back, after it briefly | |
recovered from the near record lows of the spring when Trump launched | |
his unpredictable global trade war. | |
The University of Michigan’s Index of Consumer Sentiment unexpectedly | |
fell early this month to a reading of 55.4, with consumers continuing | |
“to note multiple vulnerabilities in the economy,” according to a | |
release. Joanne Hsu, the survey’s director, said in commentary that | |
“trade policy remains highly salient to consumers, with about 60% of | |
consumers providing unprompted comments about tariffs during | |
interviews.” | |
Americans are also planning to cut back on spending in the future. | |
Consumers expect that their monthly spending growth will likely be in | |
the 3% range for the next year, according to the latest consumer | |
survey from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, released Monday, a | |
step back from expectations for 3.3% monthly growth. | |
Federal Reserve officials on Tuesday begin their two-day policy | |
meeting, which is widely expected to result in the first interest rate | |
cut since December. A weakening labor market is a key reason why the | |
Fed is expected to lower rates. | |
For now, America’s economic engine is still revving, largely thanks | |
to the group that’s typically responsible for keeping spending | |
afloat. | |
“The retail sales figures suggest aggregate spending is now back on | |
track following a weak [first half of the year], but we think much of | |
that strength has been concentrated among higher income households, who | |
are responsible for most spending,” Michael Pearce, deputy chief US | |
economist at Oxford Economics, said in written commentary Tuesday. | |
“Spending among low-income consumers is still under pressure from a | |
weakening labor market and a policy mix that is weighing on real | |
disposable incomes.” | |
“We expect that dynamic to persist in 2026, even as overall spending | |
holds up,” he added. | |
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