While consumer sentiment
has, in general, been on the upswing since the Great Recession, as we can see
in this chart from FRED, even at its current level of 93.8, it is just reaching levels
that would have been considered average during the period from the 1980s
until the Great Recession took hold:
Why the pessimism and why has it taken so long for consumer sentiment to improve?
An analysis by Tim Chen, the founder of
NerdWallet and former hedge fund equity analyst, may give us a hint. His calculations show that, as of December 2014,
among all households in the United States, credit card debt averages out to be
$7,281. If we look at only at households that have credit card debt,
the average outstanding balance rises to a whopping $15,608.
Let's look at consumer
credit as a whole. Here is a graph from FRED showing the changes
in the level of consumer credit, excluding mortgages, since 2006:
You'll notice the decline
in consumer credit as the Great Recession took hold of the economy during 2008
and 2009. Consumer credit fell from a peak of $2.678 trillion in
July 2008 to $2.519 trillion in July 2010, a fall of $159 billion or 5.9
percent. Since its low point, consumer credit has continued its march
upwards, hitting $3.279 trillion in October 2014, a rise of $760 billion or 30
percent from its post-Great Recession low point.
Before we go any further,
let's look at two definitions:
1.) Revolving Credit (debt): In this type of debt,
consumers pay a commitment fee and are then allowed to use funds as needed.
The outstanding balance does not have to be repaid every month and there
are not a fixed number of payments. The most common type of revolving
debt is a credit card.
2.) Non-revolving Credit (debt): In this type of
debt, credit cannot be reused after payments are made and the balance must be
repaid at the end of the loan period. Two examples include car and
student loans.
Here is a graph showing what has happened to
the level of revolving credit since 2006:
Here is a graph showing what has happened to
the level of non-revolving credit since 2006:
Let's focus on the
changes to the level of non-revolving debt. As you can see from the
graphs, non-revolving debt levels have mushroomed, hitting $2.396 trillion, up
$783 billion or 48.5 percent from the beginning of the Great Recession.
This is the steepest growth rate in non-revolving debt since record-keeping
began in the mid-1940s as shown on this graph:
Since non-revolving debt
includes car loans, here is what has happened to car loan levels
since 2006:
There was a rather
precipitous drop in car loans during and after the Great Recession but, since
hitting a low point of $698 billion in the third quarter of 2010, the volume of
car loans has risen by $245 billion or 35 percent in the third quarter of
2014.
At the same time as
non-revolving debt levels were rising, here is a graph showing what happened to
inflation corrected hourly compensation levels since 2006:
Obviously, real wage
growth has been very modest over the past decade, putting consumers further and
further behind as they take on more and more debt. While consumer
sentiment has improved since consumers were hammered during the Great
Recession, the growing levels of consumer indebtedness and the lack of growth
of real wages is likely to continue to keep consumer sentiment at low levels not
seen during most other economic growth phases. If, as predicted, interest rates rise, debt-ridden consumers may find that they are even more pessimistic than they already are.
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