University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers: Tariffs Weaken Confidence
The Consumer Sentiment Index posted its largest monthly decline in
The 2012 plunge reflected widespread fears among consumers that they would be pushed off the "fiscal cliff" due to rising taxes and falling government spending, said U-M economist
The recent decline is due to negative references to tariffs, which were spontaneously mentioned by one-in-three consumers, he said. Unlike concerns about the fiscal cliff, which were promptly resolved, Trump's tariff policies have been subject to repeated reversals amid threats of higher future tariffs.
Such tactics may have some merit in negotiations with
"The August data indicate that the erosion of consumer confidence due to tariff policies is now well under way," Curtin said. "Compared with those who did not reference tariffs, consumers who made spontaneous negative references to tariffs also voiced higher year-ahead inflation expectations, more frequently expected rising unemployment, and expected smaller annual gains in household incomes.
"While the overall level of sentiment is still consistent with modest gains in consumption during the year ahead, the data nonetheless increased the likelihood that consumers could be pushed off the tariff cliff in the months ahead. This could result in a much slower growth in consumption and the overall economy."
Negative Impact on Spending from Tariffs
Overall buying attitudes toward appliances, home electronics and other household durables fell to their lowest level in five years, with net price references more negative than anytime since
Importantly, tariffs had a significant impact; among those who spontaneously mentioned tariffs negatively, 35% held unfavorable views of buying conditions for household durables, well above the 20% among those who didn't mention tariffs. Despite lower interest rates, vehicle and home buying attitudes declined on balance in the August survey.
Strength in Personal Finances Begins to Weaken
Personal financial expectations weakened, with households who expected financial gains falling to 36%--the lowest percentage since
The falloff in expected income gains was widespread across socioeconomic groups, with the largest monthly decline among those under age 45, falling to 3.3% from last month's 4.8%.
Jobs, the other pillar of strength, also displayed some cracks in August, as consumers expected slight increases rather than declines in the national unemployment rate during the year ahead.
Consumer Sentiment Index
The Consumer Sentiment Index was 89.8 in
About the Surveys
The Surveys of Consumers is a rotating panel survey based on a nationally representative sample that gives each household in the coterminous
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