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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Duncan Baird who started this subject3/3/2003 12:26:08 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) of 1576474
 
Consumer Spending Falls

WASHINGTON (March 3) - Consumers worried about a possible war with Iraq and their own financial prospects trimmed spending in January - the first such rollback in four months - sending another trouble sign for an already struggling economy.

The 0.1 percent cutback reported by the Commerce Department Monday came after consumers splurged in December, boosting their spending by a sizable 1 percent. End of year financing deals on cars and other big-ticket goods proved too good to pass up.

In January, however, consumers sharply cut spending on such big-ticket ''durable'' goods - items expected to last at least three years. And that was the major factor behind the overall drop in spending for the month.

The cutback in spending came as Americans' incomes, including wages, interest and government benefits, went up by a modest 0.3 percent for the sixth straight month in January.

Both the spending and income figures - which are not adjusted for inflation - were weaker than economists were expecting. They were forecasting spending to go up by 0.2 percent and incomes to grow by 0.4 percent in January.

Worries about a war with Iraq, a rollercoaster stock market, a sluggish job market and sinking confidence in the economy are a few of the forces making consumers more cautious.

The 0.1 percent drop in spending in January marked the first and biggest decline since September, when consumers trimmed spending by 0.4 percent.

Unlike businesses, which have been loathe to make big financial commitments, consumers have been the main force keeping the economy going. Their spending accounts for two-thirds of all economic activity in the United States.

If a war were to break out, economists believe consumers initially would sharply cut back on their spending, a force that would slow the recovery.

If the United States were to put a quick and successful end to the war, then consumers and businesses would probably return to more normal buying and investing behavior, helping economic growth. But if a war turns out to be drawn out and severe supply disruptions cause dramatic spikes in oil prices, the economy could be looking at a backslide into recession.

The Federal Reserve is expected to hold short-term interest rates at 41-year lows of 1.25 percent when it meets next on March 18. Fed policy-makers hope that by keeping rates so low consumers and businesses would be more inclined to boost spending and investment, helping along the recovery.

In January, consumers cut spending on ''durable'' goods, such as cars, by 5.7 percent, the biggest drop since Feb. 1990, and a reversal from the brisk 6.8 percent rise registered in December.

Spending on nondurables, such as food and clothes, went up by 1.3 percent in January, following a 0.4 percent increase. Consumers boosted spending on services, including travel and utilities, by 0.4 percent, up from a tiny 0.1 percent advance in December.

Americans' disposable - or after-tax income - rose by 0.3 percent in January, down from a 0.4 percent rise in December.

With income growth outpacing spending, the nation's personal savings rate - savings as a percentage of after-tax income - rose from 3.9 percent in December to 4.3 percent in January.

AP-NY-03-03-03 1001EST

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.
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