Key Takeaways
- Interest rates and inflation dent consumer confidence
- Consumers are becoming more discerning
- Household balance sheets remain healthy
As goes the consumer, so goes the U.S. economy. As Wall Street knows, the importance of the consumer cannot be overstated. That’s because consumer spending is the main engine of growth, representing ~70% of US economic activity – nearly 10% more of the economy than it did in the early 1980s. That is why there is so much focus on what the consumer will do next. Thus far, the consumer has been resilient – supported by a strong job market, excess pandemic savings and solid wage gains. However, some cracks have started to surface. Below we discuss a myriad of factors that are impacting the consumer, highlighting the more challenged areas in red, concerning, but not overly problematic areas in yellow, and positive areas in green, along with our view on where the consumer and the economy will go next.
Bottom line | Although pockets of concern have emerged, we are only expecting a modest pullback in consumer spending in the months ahead. The slowdown will most likely be driven by the lower-end consumer, who is more acutely feeling the pain of the Fed’s restrictive policy and lingering impacts from inflation. However, modest job growth, rising real wages and record net worth should keep upper-income consumers spending, cushioning any weakness from financially strapped consumers. This is a key reason why 2024 consensus estimates for growth have climbed from 1.2% at the start of the year to 2.2% today.

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