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Inflation rise hits US consumers | Inflation rise hits US consumers |
(10 minutes later) | |
US consumer spending rose more than expected in January, but much of the gain was down to rising prices. | US consumer spending rose more than expected in January, but much of the gain was down to rising prices. |
The Commerce Department said personal spending rose 0.4% last month, a bigger rise than economists were expecting. | The Commerce Department said personal spending rose 0.4% last month, a bigger rise than economists were expecting. |
But the report showed that a key gauge of inflation rose 0.4%, with shoppers spending more on food and fuel. | But the report showed that a key gauge of inflation rose 0.4%, with shoppers spending more on food and fuel. |
Economists say there is a danger of "stagflation" in the US - a situation where the economy is not growing, accompanied by high inflation. | Economists say there is a danger of "stagflation" in the US - a situation where the economy is not growing, accompanied by high inflation. |
However, on Thursday, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke told US lawmakers that he did not expect a period of stagflation. | |
Instead Mr Bernanke expects rising oil, metals and food prices to level out. | Instead Mr Bernanke expects rising oil, metals and food prices to level out. |
He also hinted that the Fed was poised to cut interest rates below 3% if problems in the housing and credit markets threatened to push the US economy into negative growth. | |
'Weak picture' | |
On Thursday, revised figures from the US Department of Commerce confirmed that US economic growth dropped sharply in the last three months of 2007 after spending on new housing collapsed. | |
Also this week, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which guarantee about 45% of US mortgages, both reported huge net losses for 2007, and warned of further bad news as the glut of unsold homes increases, house prices drop and mortgage defaults stack up. | |
Analysts say it is crucial for consumer spending, which accounts for two thirds of US gross domestic product, to remain robust in order to prevent the economy from a recession. | |
But fears are growing that consumers are being squeezed too far. | |
"It is a weak picture of the consumer. Income growth, the raw material for spending, is fading." said Robert Brusca of FAO Economics. |
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