economie

Rising household debt and shrinking incomes are setting the stage for a recession, top economist says

Household debt is rising in the US, per the Fed’s latest Household Debt and Credit report.

A rising number of credit card loans are transitioning into serious delinquency.

Auto loans transitioning into serious delinquency is also on the rise.

When combined, outstanding credit card and auto loan debt amount to around $2.8 trillion, representing a larger pool of debt than was seen in the subprime mortgage crisis, Rosenberg said.

“This is no small matter, even if this cycle won’t lead to any financial contagion or banking sector fiascos. You don’t need a disaster to generate a classic NBER-defined recession,” he added.

Meanwhile, household incomes are shrinking, creating another source of pressure on American consumers. Real disposable personal income growth has eased to just 1% on a year-over-year basis as of June, according to data from the Commerce Department, down from yearly growth of over 5% recorded in June of last year.

The personal savings rate has also been dragged down, falling to 3.4% in June, down from the average 8% savings rate recorded prior to the pandemic.

“If this measure of consumer behavior ever does pull a Bob Farrell mean-reversion, we will be in a nasty recession unless somehow work-based incomes do the near-impossible and re-accelerate in the face of a rising jobless rate,” Rosenberg said.

Markets have been increasingly concerned about the risk of recession, particularly amid recent weakening in the labor market. The economy added fewer jobs than expected in July, while the unemployment rate spiked to 4.3%, the highest jobless rate seen since the pandemic.

Rosenberg has predicted that the unemployment rate will continue to rise through the end of the year as businesses continue to struggle financially. The jobless rate could end 2024 around 5%, he previously told Business Insider, though his forecast assumes the US economy will enter a recession.

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/recession-outlook-economy-hard-landing-household-debt-income-job-market-2024-8