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US consumer spending dips first time in five months

October - 30 - 2009

consumersUS consumer spending fell for the first time in five months in September after a government program boosting auto sales ran out, official data showed Friday.

Personal consumption expenditures decreased 47.2 billion dollars or 0.5 percent last month, as expected by most economists, following a revised 1.4 jump in August, the Commerce Department said.

The fall in spending came as Americans’ income turned flat in September following a 0.1 percent increase the previous month, the department said.

The highly popular “cash-for-clunkers” program, which gave consumers a credit of up to 4,500 dollars toward the price of a new car or truck if they turn in an older vehicle with lower gas mileage, ended in August.

Government spending was key in fueling the first US growth in one year in the third quarter, hauling the world’s largest economy from a long and crippling , official data showed Thursday.

After four negative quarters, the world’s largest economy grew at a seasonally adjusted 3.5 percent annual rate in the July-September period from the second quarter, the Commerce Department said.

The increase was the first since the second quarter of 2008 and the biggest expansion since the 2007 third quarter, when a US subprime mortgage crisis triggered a global financial crisis that subsequently hammered the world economy.

After shrinking a sharp 6.4 percent in the first quarter, the economy has been on life support from the federal 787-billion-dollar emergency stimulus and other crisis measures.

The third-quarter rebound was led by consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of US and added 2.36 percentage points to GDP growth. Other leading drivers were business inventories and home building.

Consumer spending surged 3.4 percent after a 0.9 percent drop in the second quarter, a rise the department said “largely reflected” auto purchases under the cash-for-clunkers program in July and August.
2009 AFP

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