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US consumers cut back on credit card use in June

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER,AP Eco­nom­ics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Amer­i­cans cut back on credit card use in June, a sign that high unem­ploy­ment and slow growth have made some more cau­tious about spending.

Still, total con­sumer bor­row­ing increased as many kept tak­ing out loans to buy cars and attend school.

Con­sumer bor­row­ing rose by $6.5 bil­lion in June from May to total $2.58 tril­lion, the Fed­eral Reserve said Tues­day. That’s just below the all-time high reached in July 2008.

Auto and stu­dent loans rose by $10.2 bil­lion to $1.71 tril­lion in June.

Credit card debt fell $3.7 bil­lion to $865 bil­lion. That’s only 1.6 per­cent above the post-recession low reached in April 2011.

Amer­i­cans have been rely­ing less on credit cards since the 2008 finan­cial cri­sis and Great Recession.

At the same time, stu­dent loan debt has steadily increased. It has risen 54 per­cent since mid-2008 to total $902 bil­lion as of March this year, accord­ing to the Fed­eral Reserve Bank of New York.

Stu­dent loans now accounts for roughly 35 per­cent of all con­sumer debt, up from less than a quar­ter four years ago. That makes it the biggest source of con­sumer debt out­side of mortgages.

The increase partly reflects high unem­ploy­ment, which has led many Amer­i­cans to seek bet­ter edu­ca­tion and skills in a more com­pet­i­tive labor market.

We are prob­a­bly wit­ness­ing a shift in con­sumers’ atti­tudes towards debt,” said Paul Edel­stein, an econ­o­mist at IHS Global Insight. “House­holds may be will­ing to take on debt to pay for cars and edu­ca­tion… . But other forms of con­sump­tion will come increas­ingly from cur­rent incomes.”

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 the Fed. That’s down from $13.8 tril­lion in March 2008.

Some of that debt has been removed by defaults, such as foreclosures.

A Com­merce Depart­ment report last week showed that con­sumers are more fru­gal. They spent no more in June than they did in May, while their incomes rose at the fastest pace in three months.

The flat pace of spend­ing was likely because hir­ing has been weak and con­fi­dence low. Employ­ers added 163,000 jobs in July, the most in five months. But hir­ing for most of this year hasn’t been enough to lower the unem­ploy­ment rate. The rate ticked up to 8.3 per­cent in July from 8.2 per­cent in June.

Con­sumer con­fi­dence increased in July for the first time in five months, the Con­fer­ence Board said. But it remains well below healthy levels.

The econ­omy is grow­ing too slowly to boost con­fi­dence or hir­ing. It expanded at a 1.5 per­cent annual pace in the April-June quar­ter, down from 1.9 per­cent in the first quar­ter and 4.1 per­cent in the final three months of 2011.

Unless job growth picks up, con­sumer spend­ing could weaken more and drag down eco­nomic growth further.

The Fed­eral Reserve’s bor­row­ing report cov­ers auto loans, stu­dent loans and credit cards. It excludes mort­gages, home equity loans and other loans tied to real estate.

AP News Posted by on Aug 7 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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