We are seeing one of the classic signs of a looming recession—consumers are spending less and saving more, and they power 70 percent of economic activity.
The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) for May from the Bureau of Economic Activity (BEA) showed the personal savings rate has risen to 4.8 percent (black line in graph), while personal consumption expenditures decreased -0.1%, Personal savings had been increasing since early 2025. No surprise, since that is when Trump’s tariff plans were first announced.
Why are they spending less? One of the reasons cited by the consumer sentiment surveys is too much future uncertainty. Not so surprising with inflation worries still high, and the on again, off again tariff announcements that probably mean even higher prices.
The PEW Centers most recent survey said the public again sees inflation as one of the top problems facing the nation, with 62 percent saying inflation is a very big problem for the country – only slightly down from the 65 percent who said this last year (2024).
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® deteriorated by 5.4 points in June, falling to 93.0 (1985=100) from 98.4 in May. “Consumer confidence weakened in June, erasing almost half of May’s sharp gains,” said Stephanie Guichard, Senior Economist, Global Indicators at The Conference Board. “The decline was broad-based across components, with consumers’ assessments of the present situation and their expectations for the future both contributing to the deterioration.”
The University of Michigan’s Consumer sentiment survey surged 16% from May in its first increase in six months but remains well below the post-election bounce seen in December 2024 when last year’s economic growth was 3 percent, the highest in the developed world, and jobs were still plentiful.
“Despite June’s gains, however, sentiment remains about 18% below December 2024, right after the election; consumer views are still broadly consistent with an economic slowdown and an increase in inflation to come,” said Survey Director Joanne Hsu.
From the same month one year ago, the PCE price index for May increased 2.3 percent. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 2.7 percent from one year ago. It’s at least a sign of stagflation if the spending slowdown continues, since the PCE report also shows signs of higher inflation that the Fed is worried about.
No wonder consumers are more worried. Bloomberg research reveals AI could replace 53 percent of the white-collar market research analyst tasks and 67 percent of sales representative tasks, while managerial roles face only 9 to 21% automation risk.
The World Economic Forum's 2025 Future of Jobs Report reveals that 41 percent of employers worldwide intend to reduce their workforce in the next five years due to AI automation. Industries like technology, finance, and consulting are highlighted as particularly vulnerable.
It really looks like Republicans are trying as hard as possible to start a recession. They are shrinking the workforce by deporting undocumented immigrants who work with their hands and thus would be needed to fill some of the 400,000 vacant manufacturing jobs.
And passing Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill will create an unsustainable debt load, keeping interest rates high.
So though Biden suffered through higher inflation, it was because of the $trillions in New Deal legislation that caused 3.2 percent GDP growth during his term. The Trump administration has managed just -0.5 GDP growth in Trump's first quarter as President.
This is what happens when Republican tax cuts transfer even more wealth to the Oligarchs from middle and working class Americans.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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