There ought to be a lot of red faces today within the scrum of economic pundits and bean counters who have been jabbering all year that inflation and the lingering effects of the pandemic would inevitably drive the US economy into a ditch. The results won’t be known until next year, but this might turn out to be a December to remember for how misguided they’ve been.
In just the last week or so we learned from the Federal Reserve that, in spite of a personal US saving rate that is scraping along at a 17-year low, consumers are sitting on a pile of spendable cash. The Fed’s calculation of “checkable deposits” for households and nonprofit organizations — a measure of cash-on-hand — hit an all-time high of $5.12 trillion at the end of the third quarter, a stunning 20% surge from the end of 2021.
At the end of the third quarter, it was more than 25% higher than it was three years ago, just before the global Covid-19 shutdown. With household liabilities up about 20% during the same period, the balance sheet of American households would seem to be robust.
With unemployment at a historic low, it’s no surprise that Americans are growing more confident about job security, according to a bi-weekly Forbes Advisor-Ipsos poll. Although the reading is well below the pre-pandemic level, it has been rising with fewer people reporting that they know someone who has been laid off.
Inflation? Good news there, as well.
The real-time inflation index from Truflation, an independent inflation data aggregator, found that the latest year-over-year rate is just under 6%, down from 7.4% two months ago.
As someone who is in the business of understanding consumers' attitudes and forecasting economic outcomes, the constant drumbeat of impending doom may dominate the news, but consumers aren’t listening. They’re too busy shopping!