Washington — Goods and services purchased by Americans make up
one-fifth of the global economy, but the third quarter of 2008 saw the
largest drop in consumer spending since 1980.
As the financial-market turbulence prompts U.S. households to cut back spending, economies around the globe feel repercussions.
“The
U.S. consumer is a voracious consumer of goods and services,” said
Scott Talbott, a senior vice president at the Financial Services
Roundtable, which represents large financial institutions. “We [are] at
the heart of the recession. That’s why we’re going to have to be at the
heart of the recovery.”
Historically, Americans have spent a
greater share of gross domestic product (GDP) — a measure of a nation’s
economic size — than citizens of other countries have. Those
expenditures translate into jobs and economic growth around the world.
Over
the last 15 years, U.S. household spending climbed dramatically and
savings declined, raising concern among policy makers and economists
that the situation was unsustainable — even as the world was becoming
more dependent on U.S. pocketbooks.
U.S. consumer spending
grew to $9.7 trillion in 2007, a whopping 70 percent of U.S. GDP,
according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD). That amounts to 18 percent of the gross world product, which
was $54.6 trillion in 2007 according to the CIA’s World Fact Book.
The
problem with the recent dramatic growth in consumer spending is that
people borrowed against their houses, which were climbing in value by
14 percent each year earlier this decade. The real estate collapse
ended that run of easy money.
“Two-thirds of that borrowing, at least, came out of homes,” financial analyst Charles Morris told America.gov. “It was the number one supporter of consumer spending. That’s just over now.”
American
consumption should probably ratchet back to 63 percent of U.S. GDP, in
order for household savings to build to a healthy level, according to
Morris, who authored The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash.
The U.S. economy has been in recession since December 2007, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research.
In Virginia, shoppers look at cameras in a Circuit City store on the first shopping day after Thanksgiving, November 28.
“This will probably be the worst recession in
the post-World War II period,” said Gus Faucher, director of
macroeconomics at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania.
“Recessions result from imbalances in the economy, and then we correct
those imbalances and we come back out. … We are going to see the
savings rate increase as consumers more closely balance their income
and spending.”
At 0.4 percent for 2007, the U.S. savings rate
is the lowest in the world. It compares to 2.9 percent in the United
Kingdom, 3.1 percent in Japan, 6.8 percent in Italy, 10.9 percent in
Germany, 12.7 percent in France, 24 percent in China and 28 percent in
India, according to a Financial Services Roundtable analysis of OECD
data.
Americans consume more than citizens of other countries for a number of reasons.
“It’s
partly cultural, but it’s also a reflection of tax policy,” said David
Cross, president of business consultant Market Outlook. “You have much
higher marginal tax rates in Germany, which discourages spending. There
are issues of how much you can consume given the size of your home.”
The
U.S. government gives a tax deduction for interest payments on home
mortgages, which encourages people to buy larger houses and fill them
with more possessions. The lower cost of gasoline in the United States
boosts car sales, especially large cars, trucks and sport utility
vehicles.
Americans also spend more on medical services than in Europe, where health care is heavily subsidized, Cross told America.gov.
Moreover,
the U.S. market simply contains more products and services. For
instance, the Chinese don’t have access to insurance products, so they
tend to self-insure — one reason the savings rate is so high.
“Consumer attitudes toward spending and saving are very difficult to change,” Cross said.
Indeed,
U.S. policy makers don’t want consumer spending to drop too quickly.
They want to avoid the kind of economic stagnation Japan experienced
during the 1990s, when people were overly reluctant to spend.
“This
is uncharted territory,” the roundtable’s Talbott said. “If consumers
don’t spend at all, then we go into a worse recession. … We have to
start saving a little more but continue to spend.”
To that
end, the U.S. government in November committed as much as $800 billion
to revitalize the banking system and encourage loans for education,
cars and real estate.
President-elect Barack Obama has set a
goal of creating or preserving 2.5 million jobs over three years, and
Democratic lawmakers are pushing an economic recovery package that
could exceed $500 billion.
At the recent financial summit in
Washington, leaders of the G20 nations agreed to take steps to
stimulate consumer spending in their home countries. The world’s
largest economies plan to work together to stave off a global recession
and to reform the world financial system.
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