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CONSUMER SPENDING

What we buy has a broad impact

This is another in a series of questions and answers explaining the current financial crisis.

Associated Press

No pressure, but the economy's health rests on your shoulders.

The economists who know you as ''the Consumer'' are worried that you're buying less. Fewer cars, fewer engagement rings, fewer winter coats. Instead, you seem to be doing -- finally -- what your mother told you to do long ago: putting some money into savings.

That sounds so sensible. And it is. The only problem is that consumer spending, which includes housing and healthcare, comprises 70 percent of the total economy. When enough people shut their wallets, the whole economy shudders, as it's doing now.

Consumer spending dropped 1 percent in October, with demand for cars falling 4.5 percent. This was the fifth month of decline in real spending, which leaves out the effects of inflation, and the steepest five-month drop since 1980, when country was battling a deep recession.

As retailers begin what could be a rotten holiday season, the question is: Does the country's dependence on consumers make it more vulnerable than it would be if the economy had a different engine? Here are some questions and answers about consumer spending and the economy.

Q: Has consumer spending always been this large a part of the economy?

A: The rate has gone up and down. In 1929, the year the Great Depression began, consumer spending was nearly 75 percent of the nation's economy, a share that grew to 83 percent in 1932 as business spending shrank.

Conversely, as government spending increased toward the end of World War II in 1943 and 1944, consumer spending fell to half the total Gross Domestic Product, the widest measure of the economy.

Intermittently over the past 25 years, consumer spending has been edging higher as a portion of the total economy, helped by easy credit.

Q: What drives other economies?

A: In many of the largest industrialized countries -- Germany, France, Italy and Britain -- government spending makes up a much larger share of the total economy.

Free-market advocates have argued that those countries' dependence on government spending makes their economies less nimble.

On the other hand, those who argue for higher taxes and a broader safety net say the healthcare and other services that many of those countries provide their citizens add to their economies in ways that can't easily be measured.

Q:Will the government bailouts tilt the balance of the economy away from the consumer and toward the government?

A: That will depend on how much the government spends and how much the consumer saves.

The federal government has committed more than $7 trillion in its effort to contain the financial crisis -- although there's widespread agreement it won't really spend anything close to that figure.

For October, 2.4 percent of income went to personal savings, up from 1 percent in September. But that number may be misleading. If an unusually high level of our spending is financed by borrowing, selling investments, or using savings from previous periods, our savings rate could look better than it really is.

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