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Business

US consumers boost spending in October 2018

Associated Press
US consumers boost spending in October 2018
Photo shows people lining up to pay for their purchases as they shop during an early Black Friday sale at a Best Buy store in Overland Park, Kan.
AP

WASHINGTON  — Consumers boosted their spending in October at the fastest pace in seven months, while their incomes rose by the largest amount in nine months — both good signs for future economic growth.

Consumer spending rose a sharp 0.6 percent last month, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. It was the biggest increase since a similar gain in March and was three times faster than the 0.2 percent September performance. Incomes, which provide the fuel for spending, were up 0.5 percent in October, a significant pickup from a 0.2 percent September gain.

A key gauge of inflation tied to consumer spending posted a two percent rise in October compared to a year ago, hitting the annual target for inflation set by the Federal Reserve.

Excluding volatile food and energy costs, inflation has posted a 12-month gain of 1.8 percent in October, down from a 1.9 percent September advance.

Analysts predicted that inflation will head even lower in coming months as energy prices fall, a development that should boost consumer spending by giving households more to spend on other items.

“With the collapse in gasoline prices likely to provide a sizeable boost to households’ purchasing power over the next couple of months, the outlook for consumption remains positive, even with the boost from the earlier tax cuts now fading,” said Paul Ashworth, chief US economist with Capital Economics.

Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell ignited a big rally on Wall Street on Wednesday with a speech which investors read as a signal that the central bank may slow the pace of interest rate hikes next year. The Fed has boosted rates three times this year and is expected to increase rates a fourth time in December.

President Donald Trump has been vocal in his criticism of those rate hikes, blaming them for the big drop in stock prices over the past two months and arguing that they were not needed given that inflation is under control.

vuukle comment

ECONOMIC GROWTH

FEDERAL RESERVE

INFLATION

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