Thursday, October 8, 2009

Spending Money We Don't Have


I’ve been a bit reticent in my posting lately because sometimes life just gets in the way! However, I recently ran across a story on NPR that I just had to chime in about though. Consumer Spending Up, Incomes Lag talks about the increase in spending that resulted from programs such as Cash for Clunkers while income growth continued to be just about flat.

As a proponent of good debt only, this story scares me a bit. If we’re not making more money, we shouldn’t be spending more money. The statistic offered about the falling savings rate was also a bit disconcerting, but did have some good news when compared to savings rates last year.

“The big jump in spending and much weaker gain in incomes translated into a big drop in the savings rate. Personal savings in August fell to 3 percent of after-tax incomes, down from 4 percent in July. That was still nearly double the savings rate of a year ago. Economists say the savings rate will keep trending higher as households try to repair investment savings shredded by the recession.”

We all want the economy to recover, especially so people can get back to work. But a recovery based on additional debt won’t be a long-term permanent recovery, it would just put us back on the precarious house of cards that our economy was built on before the recession occurred. So the Money Maiden’s advice is to keep putting that money into savings so that we can all benefit from a stable economic recovery.