Economy Headlines
- Report: Government Dependency Increases 23 Percent Under Obama
- Fed Chief Warns Congress of “Unsustainable” Debt, Fiscal Crisis
- I Scream, You Scream: San Francisco Red Tape Nearly Strangles Small Businesses
- Rising Oil Production in Alberta: More Evidence Disproving Hubbert’s Peak
- Printing Money in Britain Doesn’t Work There Either
- Friday’s Unemployment Numbers: Correcting the Corrections
Some ads are provided by Google
They are not endorsed by The New American
| Sluggish Spending and the Non-Recovery | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser |
| Monday, 01 March 2010 19:20 |
|
Estimates for January show an extremely modest increase in consumer spending — a mere 0.3 percent — while after-tax incomes fell. According to Marketwatch.com: Real spending on durable goods, including autos, rose 0.8% in January, a reversal from the 0.3% decline seen in December. Real spending on nondurable goods rose 0.8% after a 0.8% decline in December. Real spending on services rose 0.1% after a 0.3% increase in December.... Income from assets fell 1.2%. Rental income fell 0.3%. Income from small businesses fell 0.3%, led by a big drop in farmers' income. Income from transfer payments, such as Social Security, pensions and unemployment, rose 0.7%. Real income excluding transfer payments — one of four key recession-expansion markers — fell 0.2% after three months of modest gains. In short, real income was down, while “transfer payments” were up. According to the reported statistics, those who draw a check from from the government may have seen their income go up, but those who work the land, or operate a small business, lost ground. Trackback(0)
Comments (0)
![]() Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
|





Coming in the immediate aftermath of news that the sale of new homes dropped in January to its 

