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Americans Saving More When Economy Needs Spending Most

MARTIN CRUTSINGER   02/ 1/09 03:43 PM ET   AP

Piggy Bank

WASHINGTON — Americans are hunkering down and saving more. For a recession-battered economy, it couldn't be happening at a worse time.

Economists call it the "paradox of thrift." What's good for individuals _ spending less, saving more _ is bad for the economy when everyone does it.

On Friday, the government reported Americans' savings rate, as a percentage of after-tax incomes, rose to 2.9 percent in the last three months of 2008. That's up sharply from 1.2 percent in the third quarter and less than 1 percent a year ago.

Like a teeter-totter, when the savings rate rises, spending falls. The latter accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity. When consumers refuse to spend, companies cut back, layoffs rise, people pinch pennies even more and the recession deepens.

The downward spiral has hammered the retail and manufacturing industries. For years, stores enjoyed boom times as shoppers splurged on TVs, fancy kitchen decor and clothes. Suddenly, frugality is in style.

Grace Case, 38, of Syracuse, N.Y., is a self-described recovering creditaholic. For 13 years, she charged it all _ cars, clothes, repairs, vacations. She'd make only the minimum card payments to sustain her buying spree for her and her family, which includes her husband and two children.

But after being laid off 2 1/2 years ago from her job as an accountant, she landed another accounting job that cut her salary from $60,000 to $40,000. It was impossible to meet minimum payments on her card balances.

Now, the Cases are on a strict budget. They take "staycations," grow their own vegetables, buy only used cars and pre-pay cell phones. Case hasn't used a credit card in two years. And she's saving more.

"It's really a liberating feeling," she said. "If you want something, you have to have the money for it."

Many economists think the savings rate will keep rising, perhaps as high as 6 percent or more.

So where's the money going? To savings accounts? To debt reduction?

No one knows for sure. But Robert Frank, Cornell University economist, says it doesn't much matter.

"For economic purposes, paying off debt and saving are the same," he said. "Incurring debt is negative savings; paying down debt is savings."

He sees a long-term behavioral shift. He calls the spending of the past decade or more unsustainable.

"The only way people were able to (spend heavily) was by harvesting cash out of their home equity, which was just an illusion," Frank said.

The ripple effect has been brutal. The economy shrank at a 3.8 percent annual rate in the final three months of 2008, the worst showing in 26 years. The biggest reason was that consumer spending fell for a second straight quarter, something that hasn't happened since the 1990-91 recession.

Analysts believe the hard times will persist in 2009 as consumers, squeezed by layoffs and tighter credit, delay purchases of cars and other big-ticket items.

Some experts say consumers have been so shaken by how fast their wealth has shrunk, so burned by credit card debt, that they might not resume their robust spending for years, if ever.

"People are not saving; they are building financial bomb shelters," said Mark Stevens, who runs a management consulting firm, MSCO, in Rye Brook, N.Y.

Matthew Conrad, a financial manager at Complete Wealth Management in Orange County, Calif., says he knows of people who drive a BMW or Mercedes and eat macaroni and cheese for dinner several nights a week. That suggests some are making an awkward shift from free-spending habits and are reluctant to give them up.

Today's consumers might even start to rival their penny-pinching, Depression-era grandparents.

"The generation that lived through the Great Depression was very conservative in their spending and aggressive in savings," said Scott Hoyt, senior director of consumer economics at Moody's Economy.com. "I think we're going to have a set of consumers who are moving in that direction because they don't have that much faith in their assets."

___

AP Business Writers Anne D'Innocenzio and Eileen AJ Connelly in New York, Dave Carpenter in Chicago, Stephen Singer in Hartford, Conn., Mark Jewell in Boston and David Pitt in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Americans are hunkering down and saving more. For a recession-battered economy, it couldn't be happening at a worse time. Economists call it the "paradox of thrift." What's good fo...
WASHINGTON — Americans are hunkering down and saving more. For a recession-battered economy, it couldn't be happening at a worse time. Economists call it the "paradox of thrift." What's good fo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
02:21 PM on 02/03/2009
I'd like to challenge any one in public office or the banking industry to live on the average American's wage for one year!
Then live on unemployment and still pay taxes!

See if it doesn't change you!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
02:08 PM on 02/03/2009
It may not be a matter of saving! It may be a matter of nothing left to spend! Enemployment doesnt go far and the new proposed tax relief for unemployment is not worth the paper it's written on! Approx 1 month forgiveness on an entire claim and no forgiveness once you go into the extensions.

Talk of providing relief to unemployed may have been an Obama promise but ut sure got lost in Congress!! they don't have a clue not do they care.
10:37 AM on 02/03/2009
So now, the citizens have decided to create a financial revolution, and save their money! More power to us!!
10:37 AM on 02/03/2009
Simple rule in life. Take money from other people. Keep the money for your family.
10:34 AM on 02/03/2009
Anyone else think it strange that OUR tax dollars are used to save the banks. Any help for the average people is seen by the repubs as problematic. They want tax cuts for the rich again. So, it appears the plan is take money that all of us paid in taxes, give it to the very people who have robbed us over the past 30 years. Since most of the tax dollars are now (after the last 8 years) already gone, we must borrow from our financial owners in other countries (the very ones whom we have made rich with our spending) Then tax us, our children, our grandchilden, and probably our great-grandchildren to pay of the loans that were taken from other countries. We are really getting the short end of this deal, aren't we?
10:23 AM on 02/03/2009
I remember a few years back, when we recieved up to 10 credit card offers a day in the mail. Had to buy a shreader to safely dispose of them. Some of them offered free calculators as incentive to apply for their card. I remember thinking that credit card companies should instead offer a shreader as an inticement !

Now they blame the consumer/citizens for the downfall of the financial system. CUTE!
10:12 AM on 02/03/2009
Everybody wants our money ~ one way or another. If we don't draw the line, and ignore the economy, we will all be needing food stamps. Healthe Care? A thing of the past, if we don't save ourselves, we are financially doomed. Keep saving all you can.
01:16 AM on 02/03/2009
I am a small rural farmer. The cost of seed and fertilizer is now 4x the cost of last year. Darn right I am saving my money and not spending it. If I didn't have chickens for eggs and produce canned from last season, my family would be hungry now. I will be planting less and folks, your food bills will be higher shortly because this is the norm for almost everyone in this farming community.
The pride in being the "breadbasket" of the nation is gone. Food = life. Save your money because you are going to need it more than ever... just to continue living.
It is pure arrogance to say we should spend our last dollars to help the economy while those with the ear of the politicians get fatter wallets and bigger houses. Save your money and save yourselves. These times are more desperate than you can imagine. The repercussions have not yet hit your local super market, but they will.
11:19 PM on 02/02/2009
The people who suggest that saving money is bad are the same one's with all the bright ideas that got us into this mess?

Are the people suggesting saving is bad insane? Regular folks see that we are losing jobs everywhere. They can see this with our own eyes. The rational thing for an individual to do is save for the rainy day which is coming, so you and your family don't starve to death when you lose your job.

Help the economy? By not saving? Ridiculous sophistry, not even economically sound. Spend, spend. spend is what got us here.

Look at what this country has become.

People, save your money, hide your money, hoard your money. Pay your debts. Buy only essentials and lots of them. The Federal Government will do a Katrina on you when their ridiculous policies fail and we enter the Greatest Depression.
11:04 PM on 02/02/2009
"What's good for individuals _ spending less, saving more _ is bad for the economy when everyone does if"

Individuals saving money and living within their means is not bad for the economy. What is bad for the economy is Paying CEOs over 400% more than their lowest paid worker, allowing American jobs to go overseas, NAFTA, WTO, Free/Fair trade, tax shelters that permit large corporations to earn huge profits that they don't get taxed on, etc.

I won't be listening to the economists - I will be saving and living within my means. The credit cards were destroyed a long time ago - 19% interest rates. We used to call those people loan sharks but VP Biden helped to make that legal.
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11:15 PM on 02/02/2009
Well said. I have always lived simply and stayed out of debt, and I haven't suffered for it.

It's good that people are saving money and/or paying down debt, and defining their needs and wants.

A society that is built largely on consumer spending is insane.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rosal
JUSTICE always wins
11:31 PM on 02/02/2009
Well said, however, don't put all the blame on Biden. There is plenty of blame to go around
10:29 PM on 02/02/2009
The wizards of Wall Street, through their greed and corrupt practices, have given the vast middle class two options: risk destitution and bankruptcy or save. We've chosen to save. So you mean they've discovered that all their $87,000 rugs and $1500 garbage cans won't keep the economy afloat. I want to see it in writing. I want to see the WSJ, which is now trying to pull Cobra relief for the laid off out of the stimulus bill, admit that a healthy economy depends on a prosperous and thriving middle class. I dare them.
10:18 PM on 02/02/2009
.The economy needs????

That's the problem...we should be talking about what people need.
And we need more than an economy.
09:41 PM on 02/02/2009
Let the big Wall Street Banks Spend. They just got a trillion of our dollars!
09:39 PM on 02/02/2009
This is bull. Americans need to STOP BUYING cheap foreign goods of poor quality. Many RETIREMENT PLANS have been GUTTED by Wall Street as a result of their greed, ineptitude, and culture of entitlement. Americans need to SAVE.
08:13 PM on 02/02/2009
Stop telling average Americans like me that this mess is our fault.
Most of us have been cutting back since 2001.
What is happening now is due to greed and corruption by people who have the wealth and power.
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AZterritory
Don't tell me you're a patriot. Make me guess.
09:31 PM on 02/02/2009
Absolutely, well said.