The Delaware Gazette

US consumers cut credit card use for 2nd month

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER

AP Eco­nom­ics Writer

WASHINGTON — Amer­i­cans cut back on bor­row­ing in July for the first time in nearly a year. Credit card use fell for the sec­ond straight month, sug­gest­ing many con­sumers remain cau­tious in the face of high unem­ploy­ment and slow growth.

Total con­sumer bor­row­ing dipped $3.3 bil­lion in July from June to a sea­son­ally adjusted $2.705 tril­lion, the Fed­eral Reserve said Mon­day. It was the first decline since August 2011. The drop in credit card debt off­set a small rise in a mea­sure of auto and stu­dent loans.

The Fed also said Amer­i­cans have bor­rowed much more than pre­vi­ously esti­mated after it revised con­sumer bor­row­ing data back to Decem­ber 2010. June’s fig­ure was increased to $2.708 tril­lion, or $130 bil­lion higher than ini­tially thought. It’s also well above pre-recession levels.

Con­sumer debt declined even though Amer­i­cans boosted their spend­ing in July by the most in five months, accord­ing to gov­ern­ment data released last week.

Still, the job mar­ket has weak­ened sub­stan­tially from the start of the year, which is keep­ing down­ward pres­sure on spend­ing. In August, employ­ers added just 96,000 jobs, down from 141,000 in July and well below the aver­age 226,000 jobs a month in the January-March quarter.

Con­sumers have been using credit cards much less since the 2008 credit cri­sis. Four years ago, Amer­i­cans had $1.03 tril­lion in credit card debt, an all-time high. In July, it was $850.7 bil­lion — or 17 per­cent lower.

Dur­ing that same time, stu­dent loan debt has increased dra­mat­i­cally. The cat­e­gory that includes auto and stu­dent loans, along with other loans for items such as boats, has jumped to $1.85 tril­lion from $1.56 tril­lion in July 2008.

Stu­dent loans totaled $914 bil­lion in the April-June quar­ter, accord­ing to a sep­a­rate report from the Fed­eral Reserve Bank of New York released two weeks ago. That’s up from $611 bil­lion in the July-September quar­ter in 2008, an increase of nearly 50 per­cent over the past four years.

Much of the increase in stu­dent loans is a result of high unem­ploy­ment, which has led many Amer­i­cans to seek bet­ter edu­ca­tion and skills in a more com­pet­i­tive labor market.

Stu­dent loan growth slowed sharply in July. Stu­dent loans held by the fed­eral gov­ern­ment increased only $1.1 bil­lion. That’s the small­est gain since Decem­ber 2010 and below the recent monthly gain of $5 billion-$6 bil­lion, accord­ing to Paul Edel­stein, direc­tor of finan­cial eco­nom­ics at IHS Global Insight, a fore­cast­ing firm.

The slow­down may have occurred because the government’s stu­dent loan rates were expected to have increased in July. The rate increase even­tu­ally was pushed back until July 2013.

Over­all, Amer­i­cans’ finances are improv­ing, the New York Fed said in its report. Fewer peo­ple are falling behind on their mort­gages or credit card debt.

And con­sumers are sav­ing more. Amer­i­cans saved 4 per­cent of their after-tax income in the sec­ond quar­ter. That’s up from 2.5 per­cent when the reces­sion began.

The weak job mar­ket is putting more pres­sure on the Fed­eral Reserve to pro­vide more help to the ane­mic econ­omy. Fed offi­cials will meet Wednes­day and Thurs­day. Econ­o­mists expect the cen­tral bank to announce another round of bond buy­ing to put down­ward pres­sure on long-term inter­est rates.

The econ­omy is grow­ing too slowly to boost busi­ness and con­sumer con­fi­dence and spur sus­tained gains in spend­ing and hir­ing. Over­all eco­nomic growth slowed to an annual rate of just 1.7 per­cent in the April-June quar­ter and ana­lysts don’t expect much of a pick-up for the rest of the year.

Over­all, Amer­i­cans have been steadily par­ing debt since the finan­cial cri­sis. House­hold debt, includ­ing mort­gages and home equity lines of credit, has declined for 16 straight quar­ters to $12.9 tril­lion in March, accord­ing to a sep­a­rate Fed sur­vey on con­sumer finances. That’s down from $13.8 tril­lion in March 2008.

Some of that debt has been removed by defaults, such as fore­clo­sures. But Amer­i­cans are also repair­ing their finances by pay­ing down debts.

The Fed’s monthly con­sumer credit report cov­ers auto loans, stu­dent loans and credit cards. Unlike the quar­terly Fed report, it excludes mort­gages, home equity loans and other loans tied to real estate.

AP News Posted by on Sep 10 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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