Rick Newman

So Much For Thrift

By Rick Newman

Posted: October 1, 2009

The A-list economic indicators are GDP growth and the unemployment rate, which tell us at a glance if the recession is over, and if it feels like it's over. (It is over, but it doesn't feel like it.) But I'm more interested in another monthly number: The personal savings rate. This is the figure that tells us if American consumers have changed their profligate ways, or if we're truly addicted to spending and debt.

At the moment, we seem to be in rehab, struggling mightily to break our spending habit. After drifting upward earlier this year, the personal savings rate has dipped from a high of 5.9 percent in May to 3 percent in August. History tells us that a healthy savings rate is somewhere between 6 and 10 percent of income, which is what it was for most of the 1950s, '60s, and '70s. In 1985 the savings rate started a long drift downward, and in 2005 it actually became negative: As a nation, we literally spent more than we earned.

[See 6 ways the recession will change retirement.]

Many economists have speculated that the Great Recession of 2008-2009 is going to force Americans to become thrifty once again. We can no longer finance cars, vacations, and shopping sprees with home equity loans or easy credit. Banks are lowering lending limits on credit cards and hiking fees. And anybody thinking about retirement needs to ramp up their savings, to plug the losses caused by plunging home values and a stock market crash.

Unless a good sale comes along, which is what happened over the summer. The Cash for Clunkers program did what it was supposed to do: persuade gloomy consumers to get down to the dealership and buy some cars. That single program drove consumer spending in August to its biggest increase since 2001, according to Moody's Economy.com. Hooray for the resurgent American consumer!

[See 4 problems that could sink America.]

The only problem is, incomes didn't go up in August by the same amount as spending, so our inner saver got shoved aside once again. Sure, we all tell ourselves that we can break the rules just this once, since deals like this don't come along very often. But clunker-like deals are actually pretty common these days. The government's home-buyer credit basically offers cash back if you buy a house. That could get extended beyond its November deadline and even become permanent. Washington could enact other government subsidies if the economy doesn't recover quickly enough. And all that's on top of deep discounts offered by most retailers these days just to keep the doors open. The whole nation is on sale.

There's good reason to be skeptical about the "new era of thrift." It's one thing to put off purchases for a few months or even a year or two. It's a much bigger lifestyle shift to permanently reduce the amount of stuff we buy and get used to living with less. And it's not just consumers who have to do it. The U.S. government is one of the greatest debtors in the history of the world, spending vastly more money than it takes in. Government and political leaders know that saving money is healthy, yet they also know a growing economy requires Americans to spend money. So they create perverse incentives like Cash for Clunkers and send a convoluted message to consumers, like offering an occasional cigarette to a smoker who's trying to quit. Sure, it's just one or two, but that's all it takes to sustain the addiction.

[See why we're stuck with one ugly economy.]

The real message seems to be: Sure, save more money. But couldn't you wait a year or two, till the economy's in better shape? Spend today, save tomorrow: It's a message we all like to hear.

To dear readers

Maybe "personal saving" is down because many are unemployed. Unemployed folks tend to spend their savings (on such things as groceries, car payments and rent/mortgage).

thinker, not a fighter of IL @ Nov 08, 2009 20:51:21 PM

Fiscal responsibility is required

Muser of NM: Just 'musing' on your posting... A "strong public option" is not the solution to all economic problems. Stop fawning over Obama's BS rhetoric and engage a few brain cells in your musing. How do you think it will be paid for? Free healthcare for all is not "free".

This may come as a suprise to you, but healthcare does not drive the economy. Healthcare is not the reason Americans entered into sub-prime mortgages. Healthcare is not the reason Americans spend more than they make. Healthcare is an issue, but Obama's proposal is not the correct solution.

Your solution to the ecomonic problems facing America is to cease all printing of money and simultaneously raise interest rates (to some "reasonable" level... reasonable for whom?). This shows a remarkable lack of understanding of the U.S. economy.

You are missing the point of the entire article. Americans are infected with a feeling of entitlement to 'the good life' and feel a compulsion to 'keep up with the Joneses'. While being thrifty was in vogue for a while, Americans will not break the habit so easily.

Please try to post intelligent and well thought out comments...

Anthony of PA @ Oct 20, 2009 02:33:00 AM

The problems are many

A "consumer-driven" economy cannot grow much if everybody is saving enough to catch up from the spending excesses of the recent past.

The recession is not "over" until the Fed and other central banks stop printing money, restore interest rates to reasonable levels AND THE ECONOMY DOES NOT RE-CRASH as a result of those two actions.

Few people in the lower four-fifths of the country can out-save the increases in their current and, more importantly, FUTURE, health care costs---unless significant reform is enacted to actually stop the rise of the costs. A very strong public option leading toward single-payer is the ONLY way you get to that.

Few people in the lower four-fifths of the country can out-save the long-term trend of reductions in their earnings and/or complete loss of their jobs.

Muser of NM @ Oct 01, 2009 11:53:20 AM

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Rick Newman

Rick Newman

The global economy is mysterious, even scary. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman connects the dots. In addition to his writing for U.S. News, Rick is the co-author of two books: Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11, and Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

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