The Delaware Gazette

US consumer debt rises on more car, school loans

MARTIN CRUTSINGER

AP Eco­nom­ics Writer

WASHINGTON — U.S. con­sumers bor­rowed more in Novem­ber to buy cars and attend school, but stayed cau­tious with their credit cards.

The Fed­eral Reserve said Tues­day that con­sumers increased their bor­row­ing in Novem­ber by $16 bil­lion from Octo­ber to a sea­son­ally adjusted record of $2.77 trillion.

Bor­row­ing that cov­ers autos and stu­dent loans increased $15.2 bil­lion. A cat­e­gory that mea­sures credit card debt rose just $817 million.

The sharp dif­fer­ence in the bor­row­ing gains illus­trates a broader trend that began after the Great Reces­sion. Four years ago, Amer­i­cans car­ried $1.03 tril­lion in credit card debt, an all-time high. In Novem­ber, that fig­ure was 16.5 per­cent lower.

At the same time, stu­dent loan debt has increased dra­mat­i­cally. The cat­e­gory that includes auto and stu­dent loans is 22.8 per­cent higher than in July 2008. Many Amer­i­cans who have lost jobs have gone back to school to get train­ing for new careers.

The Novem­ber increase also reflected fur­ther gains in auto sales, which grew 13.4 per­cent in 2012 to top 14 mil­lion units for the first time in five years. The need to replace vehi­cles destroyed by Super­storm Sandy may have also con­tributed to the gain.

Con­sumer spend­ing rebounded in Novem­ber, helped by lower gas prices and solid job growth that car­ried over into Decem­ber. Employ­ers added 155,000 jobs in Decem­ber and 161,000 in November.

Steady hir­ing may have encour­aged con­sumers to keep bor­row­ing and spend­ing, despite tense nego­ti­a­tions to resolve the fis­cal cliff.

Still, some ana­lysts expect bor­row­ing and spend­ing may have slowed in Decem­ber as those bud­get talks in Wash­ing­ton inten­si­fied. Con­gress and the White House didn’t reach a deal to avert sharp tax increases until Jan. 1. And they delayed tougher deci­sions about spend­ing cuts for another two months.

Con­sumer con­fi­dence fell in both Novem­ber and Decem­ber, which may slow spend­ing in Decem­ber. Con­sumer spend­ing dri­ves roughly 70 per­cent of eco­nomic activity.

AP News Posted by on Jan 8 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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