Liz Peek
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Radio
  • About
  • Contact
Why US consumers may crush Biden’s reelection hopes
September 4, 2023

Why US consumers may crush Biden’s reelection hopes

Liz Peek Articles

Summer is over. Kids are heading back to school, workers are heading back to their jobs, and the 2024 campaign is heating up. Joe Biden is touting “Bidenomics” to voters, boasting of job gains and, finally, some rise in real income.

But Americans, who have been spending like crazy on vacations, eating out and travel, may be about to rain on Joe’s parade. Consumers are stretched financially, having financed their summer holidays and post-pandemic spending by saving less and borrowing more – not a sustainable trend. People have been willing to pile up debt because jobs have been plentiful and they’ve not worried about a sudden loss of income. That appears to be changing.

Plunging consumer confidence, rising debt delinquencies and a weakening jobs market suggest that the party could soon come to an end, with the economy hitting an unexpected rough patch as we approach election season.  

Given that the Real Clear Average of polls on the president’s handling of the economy today shows only 38% approving and 58% disapproving, a downturn could clobber his reelection hopes. 

A recession is not the consensus forecast. Despite aggressive interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve, the economy has remained resilient, mainly thanks to unexpectedly robust hiring.   

But now the jobs market is clearly sputtering, albeit from a frantic pace.  In August employers added 187,000 jobs, far below the monthly average of 271,000 over the past year. While job gains have plummeted, reported additions for recent months have been revised sharply downward. Also, wage gains slowed last month. That is what the Federal Reserve has been hoping to achieve through its aggressive interest rate hikes. The question is, will hiring slow or turn into layoffs? 

Employers across the country have defied prognosticators for months by continuing to add or keep workers even as corporate profits turned down. Companies had struggled to increase staff after the pandemic shutdowns, and were taking no chances of again facing a shortage of labor.

If the job market slackens, CEOs will likely change course; that may be happening now. The most recent JOLTS report showed that the number of job openings dropped 338,000 to 8.8 million in July. In addition, the “quits” number fell 7%, signaling less confidence among workers. The number of unemployed persons per job opening, while still very low, has begun to inch higher. 

August unemployment rose to 3.8% from 3.5% in July, partly driven by a welcome increase in labor participation, meaning more people are finally coming off the sidelines and looking for jobs. That increase has been driven by a continued decline in the amount of COVID-related benefits available, including an imminent resumption of interest payments on student loans after a 3-year pause. Labor force participation has climbed to 62.8, not yet reaching the 63.2% level it was before the pandemic.  

Meanwhile, consumer confidence dropped by the most in two years last month, according to the Conference Board.  The board’s chief economist noted, “Assessments of the present situation dipped in August on receding optimism around employment conditions: fewer consumers said jobs are “plentiful” and more said jobs are “hard to get.” Persistent inflation and rising interest rates on borrowings, with credit card rates now above 20%,  contributed to the gloom. 

The downturn in optimism occurred across nearly all age and income groups.  That lower-income Americans are increasingly pessimistic is no surprise; that group has been especially hard hit by higher prices for necessities like food and rents. 

A Census Bureau survey recently found that 42% of households that rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (or SNAP) are skipping meals because they cannot afford to buy enough food; another 55% said they were eating less to make ends meet – double the number from the prior year.  

Financial stress is also showing up in rising defaults on consumer debts, and especially on auto loans, which have jumped above 2%. The increase in delinquencies is especially acute among low-income Americans, who hold so-called “subprime” loans. The Washington Post reports: “During the financial crisis, 5 percent of those subprime borrowers were 60 days or more past due on their loans; that number today stands at close to 7 percent….” 

While debt soars to record levels, the amount Americans are saving is plummeting. In July, consumer spending rose 0.8% but incomes only increased 0.2%; the difference reflects increased borrowing and also a drop in the savings rate to 3.5%, way below the historical average of 8.9% from 1959 through 2023 and the 4.7% level recorded in May of this year. 

Other worrisome signs are the Conference Board’s leading indicator index, a solid forecasting tool, which has declined for 16 months in a row; in August, the downturn accelerated. Also concerning is the inverted yield curve, another reliable predictor of a slowdown with as much as a year lead time.

 Most analysts have thrown in the towel on making pessimistic forecasts, as they have been proved wrong over the past year. But, today’s optimistic consensus is worrisome.  As top economist Ed Hyman of ISI continues to remind clients, everything was going great just before the great recession… until it wasn’t.

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/us-consumers-crush-bidens-reelection-hopes

Published on Fox News

Fox Business: Liz Peek sounds alarms over a Kamala Harris presidency Biden, Dodging Criticism Over Illegal Aliens in New York, Will Lurk in Alaska, Where He Could Face a Chilly Reception

Related Posts

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

Articles

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

Screenshot 2019-06-26 07.54.58

Articles

What Kamala Harris buzz is telling us. Read between the lines, America

Screenshot 2025-05-02 at 8.06.58 AM

Articles

China underestimates Trump and his trade war — America is ready for battle

Recent Posts

  • Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agendaRepublicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda
  • Screenshot 2019-06-26 07.54.58What Kamala Harris buzz is telling us. Read between the lines, America
  • Screenshot 2025-05-02 at 8.06.58 AMChina underestimates Trump and his trade war — America is ready for battle
  • Ignore biased polls, Trump voters love his first 100 daysIgnore biased polls, Trump voters love his first 100 days

Tweets by Liz

Unable to load Tweets

Follow

Liz on Facebook

Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

Liz Peek

41 minutes ago

Liz Peek

Republicans in Congress going Squishy at Worst possible Time … See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

After a few months of celebrating Donald Trump’s astonishing political comeback by offering the president near-unanimous support, Republicans are going squishy.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 0
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

Comment on Facebook

Liz Peek

3 weeks ago

Liz Peek

Janet Yellen, despite a career chock full of massive blunders, continues to pontificate. Where was she when Joe Biden decided to flood a booming economy with trillions of excess (and uneeded) dollars?
… See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Janet Yellen is wrong about US manufacturing — and pretty much everything else

Janet Yellen remains wrong on a host of issues — including inflation, sanctions enforcement and U.S. interest rates.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 12
  • Shares: 1
  • Comments: 6

Comment on Facebook

Powerful article. Thank you for reporting the truth

Wrong about the U.S. dollar, as well.

Bet you that she has business in China. The way she was bowing for XI.

You support the current evil regime? Shame on YOU. thanks for pointing out someone who is no longer in control of ANYTHING. Jesus weeps. Happy Easter tho ma'am

Wrong about the U.S. dollar, as well.

She was doing the 'TRANSITORY' dance along with Biden and Powell knowing damn well that it would be misinterpreted by many to mean that prices would come back down. In the meantime, the FED sat on their asses with rates at zero for a year while inflation shot from about 2% to over 9%. These people essentially screwed Americans out of 20% of their life savings with the 40 yr high inflation while they printed and squandered. 'Grandma' Yellen is not the sweet, innocent little lady she portrays herself to be.

View more comments

Liz Peek

4 weeks ago

Liz Peek

Years of cheating by China has brought us to this place: it was bound to happen, but President Trump is the only president to confront our biggest adversary
… See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Trump and Xi go mano a mano on tariffs — who will back down first?

If the showdown between Xi and Trump persists, it will hurt both countries — one will have to break, and I’m guessing it won’t be Trump.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 6
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 1

Comment on Facebook

I was an IP paralegal for over 30 years. China was the absolute worst in stealing America’s intellectual property rights. Trying to fight in their courts was impossible and took years and lots of money. Most law firms gave up. Only one employer (a big corporation) fought to the end, but still their courts ruled against us. Frustrating!!

LOAD MORE

Tags

AGENDA AIR FORCE BIG GOVERNMENT BORDER WALL CHINA CLINTON CONGRESS CYBERWAR DEMOCRATS DRAIN THE SWAMP E-VERIFY ECONOMY ELON MUSK FILLIBUSTER FREEDOM CAUCUS FREEDOM WATCH GOP GORSUCH GRADUATION HACKING HEALTH CARE HILLARY IMMIGRATION INFRASTRUCTURE KUSHNER MEDIA MIDDLE EAST MOODY'S NUNES NYC OIL RAND PAUL STOCK MARKET SUPREME COURT SUSAN RICE TAXES TAX REFORM TECHNOLOGY TED CRUZ TERROR TRUMP TURKEY WALL STREET WEATHER WELLESLEY
[themify_map address="233 78th Street New York, NY 10032" width=100% height=250px zoom=14]
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Radio
  • About
  • Contact
©2017 LizPeek.org. All Rights Reserved.
Site by Steeplechase Strategies