Not a Good Report on Personal Income and Spending in May

The U.S. economy seems to be surviving on fumes today; that is, a strong Q2 print will show a very strong economy just because importers bought everything under the sun during the first quarter of the year, and the retrenchment during the second quarter is undoing the damage done to the economy during the first quarter. However, there was very little in today’s report that could be translated into “the economy remains strong,” as argued by Chairman Powell during the press conference after the June FOMC meeting.

personal consumption

It is true that personal income was much better than personal consumption, as a one-off increase in government transfers in April pushed this measure down in May. This one-off was the biggest reason for the decline in disposable personal income in May and is expected to recover in June, provided that employment remained strong during the month. We will know this on Thursday of the coming week. But for now, the reversal in net exports during the second quarter of the year will give markets some reasons to remain positive on the prospects of economic activity.

However, the weakness observed during the first and second quarter of the year in personal consumption expenditure and after the publication of the final revision to real GDP during the first quarter of the year, is going to put economic growth on thin ice during the third and fourth quarter of the year. Our forecast already includes these assumptions, but it means that the economy will remain fragile during the second half of the year. Thus, the importance of the labor market will remain key for economic growth during the rest of the year.