Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

A significant red flag for the U.S. economy is the year-over-year decline in real disposable income per capita. This erosion of consumer purchasing power rarely happens outside of a recession and is a deeply concerning indicator for future spending, the economy's primary engine.

Related Insights

While Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures economic output via spending, Gross Domestic Income (GDI) measures it via income. The significant gap between the two in Q3 suggests the economy's underlying strength is weaker than the headline number indicates, as an average of the two is often more accurate.

The standard Sahm Rule recession indicator previously failed. A new version, adjusted for volatile labor force participation, has a perfect track record and has been triggered for three consecutive months, suggesting the U.S. is currently in a recession despite positive GDP.

Despite tax cuts, total real after-tax income for Americans has shown zero growth year-over-year as of March. This stagnation in aggregate purchasing power, combined with a low savings rate, signals significant vulnerability for consumer spending, the economy's primary engine.

Despite headline economic growth, the bottom 80% of U.S. households have seen their spending power stagnate since before the pandemic. Their spending has grown at exactly the rate of inflation, meaning their real consumption hasn't increased. This data explains the widespread public dissatisfaction with the economy.

Real consumer spending is up only 1% year-to-date (non-annualized), which annualizes to a weak 1.5%. This is a significant slowdown from the typical 2-2.5% growth in previous years, indicating that consumers are substantially pulling back their expenditures.

Contrary to popular belief, the U.S. consumer shows weakness. Nominal goods consumption is up only 3.5% over the last year, and real spending is below 2%. This indicates that price inflation is primarily driven by supply shocks, not strong demand, challenging the narrative of a resilient consumer.

Beneath the surface of AI-driven growth, the US consumer is strained. Real income growth is flat, and spending is sustained only by a rapidly falling savings rate, now at pre-2008 crisis lows. This indicates the economy is more fragile than headlines suggest and vulnerable to a spending pullback.

Headline GDP figures can be misleading in an environment of high immigration and inflation. Metrics like per-capita energy consumption or the number of labor hours needed to afford goods provide a more accurate picture of individual well-being, revealing that many feel poorer despite positive official growth numbers.

The US personal savings rate fell to a dangerously low 2.6%. This reflects households drawing down savings to maintain spending amidst high inflation, a clear sign of financial stress. Such a low rate suggests current consumption levels are unsustainable without a rebound in real income.

While headline forecasts predict a 3.5% rise in holiday sales, this is nearly entirely offset by inflation, which is running close to 3%. In real terms, consumer spending will be flat at best, meaning the average family's standard of living is declining this holiday season.