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Despite official reassurances that the economy is doing well, still upbeat hiring statistics, and a modest rise in third quarter real gross domestic product (GDP), Americans rightly remain worried about the economy’s future. The White House has stressed that the U.S. economy is doing better than others. That is true, but it does not mean that things here are going well. American households can see their finances suffering from the effects of inflation and know that the trend bodes ill.

At the core of the problem is how people have begun to outspend the growth of their incomes. It is easy to understand why people are spending faster than they otherwise might. Inflation at near 40-year highs provides everyone with a huge incentive to buy before the prices rise again. The pressure is evident even with groceries. With the price of food rising at more than 11 percent a year, householders are only rational to stock up on non-perishables and to cram their freezers as full as they can. The incentive is even stronger when it comes to big-ticket items such as cars, appliances, and what the government statisticians refer to as “durable goods.” With new car prices rising at about 9.5 percent a year, stretching to buy a year earlier than you might is almost like getting a 10 percent discount on the price you are likely to pay if you wait.

But if such a rush to spend is rational, it is also destructive. According to the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis, consumer outlays have risen at almost an 8 percent annual rate since January, but personal incomes have risen at only a 5.5 percent rate. Such a difference cannot persist for long. A pullback is coming.

Signs of financial destress appear on both sides of household balance sheets. Levels of revolving credit – mostly credit cards – have accelerated tremendously. This debt load grew at an 18.1 percent annual rate in August, the most recent month for which data are available, far above the 8 percent rates of advance recorded this time last year. Measuring the same phenomenon from a different direction, the Commerce Department reports a major slowdown in household rates of saving. Flows of monies into savings have dropped 25 percent from what they were at the beginning of this year. As a percent of after-tax income, savings flows have dropped from 4.7 percent this past January to merely 3.1 percent in September, the most recent month for which data are available. True, money is still flowing into savings, but since the rich always have a surplus with which to add to wealth, the marked slowdown implies that many in the middle class and certainly of lower-income status have already given up saving.

Since households already sustain spending rates in excess of income growth, future consumption cutbacks are all but assured. The growing debt load as well as savings shortfalls will further constrain the ability to spend. The inevitable consumer cutbacks will lead to layoffs, and the attendant loss of those incomes will further constrain spending. Since consumer spending constitutes some 70 percent of the U.S. economy, those cutbacks will all but ensure a major recessionary push in coming months and quarters.

These matters raise a second and more fundamental concern. Heavy household debt levels will compete with business for the credit it needs to invest in new facilities and so expand the economy’s productive ability generally. The slowdown in flows of household savings will compound the problem. Especially because the Federal Reserve’s anti-inflation campaign is constraining the rate of new money creation, the financial system will depend more than usual on household savings to get business the credit it needs for expansion. It looks like the funds will not be there.

According to a widely-accepted rule of thumb, the two quarters or real declines in the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) during this year’s first half signaled that the economy is already in recession. If for technical reasons, some – most especially the Biden White House – refuse to acknowledge this fact, the state of affairs with household finances chronicled here suggests – and strongly – that the economy will soon be in recession. And if the bad news of the first half does in fact signal that a recession has already begun, then the picture described here suggests – equally strongly – that the recession will extend into 2023. With inflation still raging, this coming year might well deserve the descriptor: “stagflation.”

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