- by New Deal democrat
The third item from this morning’s torrent of economic data I want to address is personal income and saving. I’ll update the spending side tomorrow, including an updated look at motor vehicle sales, which were also released this morning.
On a nominal basis, personal income rose 0.7% in May, as did spending. But since prices as measured by the PCE deflator rose 0.3%, in real terms the former rounded to only a 0.2% increase (blue) and the latter a 0.3% increase (red). It is easy to see that the two metrics diverged sharply about a year ago:
Indeed, on a YoY basis, while real spending is up 2.1%, real income is *down* -0.2%:
As indicated above, I’ll withhold further comment on the spending side until tomorrow. But for real incomes to be negative YoY is dismal. As shown in the below graph, for the entire 60 year period between the inception of data and the pandemic, with only one exception (described below), real personal income was *never* negative YoY except during or immediately after the worst recessions:
The sole exception was in 2013, when a temporary Social Security tax withholding holiday that had been put in place for one year in 2012 as a stimulus measure expired. Note, however, that it was also negative in 2022 without a recession having taken place.
Similarly, real income less government transfer payments rose 0.3% for the month (blue, right scale), but is down -0.4% YoY (orange, left scale):
Similarly, before the pandemic except for 2013 and 2022, real income less government transfer payments was only negative during or immediately after recessions:
Similarly to 2012, in 2021 there were large direct one-time stimulus payments to households. Thus the 2022 income numbers suffered in comparison.
How is it that spending can continue to be so positive, with no recession occurring, despite the actual decline in real inocme? Because consumers have dipped into their savings in a big way. The personal savings rate was 3.0% for the second month in a row:
As shown in the above graph, which subtracts 3 from the saving rate so that the current level shows at the 0 line, aside from 2022 and the 2005-07 period just before the Great Recession, the personal saving rate has never been this low during the entire history of the series.
Tomorrow I’ll dig deeper into the spending side, but for now the takeaway is that the US economy would almost certainly be in a recession except for the consumer spending spree, which is almost certainly in large part funded by stock market gains and the ensuing “wealth effect” which is in turn a byproduct of the AI data center boom - or Bubble.