Trends in consumer spending and personal saving, 1959-2009.
McCully, Clinton P.
RISING consumer demand for goods and services has been a key
element of U.S. economic growth over the past 50 years. Consumer
spending--measured in the national income and product accounts (NIPAs)
as personal consumption expenditures (PCE)--accounts for more than
two-thirds of domestic demand in the United States, as measured by gross
domestic purchases. (1) PCE consists of household expenditures and of
the expenses net of sales of nonprofit institutions serving households.
Increases in consumer demand have been supported by increases in
disposable personal income (DPI)--personal income less personal current
taxes.
Real DPI and real PCE each grew by an average annual rate of 3.4
percent from 1959 to 2009, or 2.2 percent on a per capita basis. (2)
Over that time, the composition of PCE by expenditure category and by
sources of funding has changed significantly, as has the share of PCE
for goods that is accounted for by foreign-made products. There have
been significant variations in real PCE growth rates by period and in
the patterns of change during recessions and recoveries. Personal
saving, which equals DPI less personal outlays, has been affected by
variations in household net worth, consumer debt, and housing
investment). (3)
The trends and developments in PCE over 1959 to 2009 include the
following:
* A large increase in the share of PCE accounted for by services,
particularly by health care and by financial services and insurance
* A large decrease in the share of PCE accounted for by goods,
particularly by food and by clothing and footwear
* A significant decrease in the share of PCE accounted for by
out-of-pocket expenditures
* Much higher rates of price change for services than for goods
* Low rates of change in goods prices associated with large
increases in the import shares of expenditures for goods
* A significant slowing in the real PCE growth rate over the last
decade
* A longer period of decrease and a slower recovery in real PCE
during and after the 2007-2009 recession than in any recession since
1960. (4)
The trends and developments in personal saving between 1959 and
2009 include the following:
* A 25-year upward trend in the personal saving rate followed by a
23-year downward trend until increases in the recession years of 2008
and 2009.
* A 39-year period in which households were net lenders to other
sectors, followed by a period from 1999 to 2007 in which they were net
borrowers and a reversion to net-lender status in the recession years of
2008 and 2009.
The remainder of this article covers changes in PCE shares,
long-term PCE growth, changes in the import shares of PCE goods
categories, changes in shares of PCE by source of funds, cyclical patterns of change in PCE, and factors affecting the personal saving
rate.
PCE Shares and Long-Term Growth
The share of current-dollar PCE accounted for by services increased
from 45.7 percent in 1959 to 67.7 percent in 2009 (table 1).5 This large
increase in share was overwhelmingly accounted for by much faster growth
in services prices. Growth in real PCE was nearly identical, averaging
3.5 percent for services and 3.4 percent for goods. Services prices
increased at an average rate of 4.4 percent, nearly 2 percentage points
more than the 2.6 percent change in goods prices. Prices for each of the
household services expenditure categories increased at a faster rate
than prices for total PCE, which averaged 3.6 percent, while prices for
all of the PCE goods categories except gasoline and other energy goods
increased at a rate less than, or equal to, this average. Consumer
services are generally not tradable commodities, and except for foreign
travel by U.S. residents, the import share of PCE services is only about
0.1 percent. For goods, price changes for categories in which imports of
finished goods have been an increasing share of consumer purchases over
time have been particularly low; the categories of clothing and footwear
and recreational goods and vehicles exemplify this phenomenon. (See the
section "Import Shares of PCE Goods.")
Among PCE services categories, the largest increases in shares were
for health care services and for financial services and insurance. The
share of PCE accounted for by health care services increased from 4.7
percent in 1959 to 16.2 percent in 2009, while the share accounted for
by financial services and insurance increased from 3.9 percent in 1959
to 8.1 percent in 2009. Prices for health care services increased by an
average of 5.7 percent, and prices for financial services and insurance
increased by an average of 4.6 percent. The growth in real PCE for both
health care and for financial services and insurance was 3.9 percent,
which was higher than the average growth in total real PCE of 3.4
percent, so that current-dollar expenditures growth averaged 9.9 percent
for health care and 8.7 percent for financial services and insurance.
Together, these categories accounted for more than two-thirds of the
increase in the services share of PCE.
The share of PCE accounted for by goods decreased from 54.3 percent
in 1959 to 32.3 percent in 2009. The share accounted for by food and
beverages decreased 11.6 percentage points, from 19.4 percent to 7.8
percent, and the share accounted for by clothing and footwear decreased
4.8 percentage points, from 8.0 percent to 3.2 percent. (6) Together,
these categories accounted for about three-fourths of the decline in the
share of PCE accounted for by goods.
Health care. The share of PCE accounted for by health care that
includes health care commodities, such as prescription drugs and optical
goods, and health care services increased from 5.9 percent in 1959 to
19.7 percent in 2009. The increase in the health care services share of
PCE was accounted for by outpatient services, which increased from 2.7
percent to 7.7 percent, and by hospital and nursing home services, which
increased from 1.9 percent to 8.5 percent. The share of PCE accounted
for by health care commodities increased from 1.2 percent to 3.5
percent; almost all of the increase was accounted for by prescription
drugs.
Many factors have contributed to the dramatically increased share
of PCE accounted for by health care.
Some of these factors include the following:
* Large increases in the share of health care expenditures funded
by government and by employers * The aging of the population, requiring
increased levels of health care
* The development of expensive new medical procedures and
technologies
In 1959, 72.7 percent of PCE for health care was paid for by direct
out-of-pocket expenditures, and by 2009, this share had declined to 17.6
percent. (7) During this period, the share of PCE for health care paid
for by government increased from 3.4 percent to 45.4 percent. The most
important changes in government funding of PCE health care resulted from
the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Medicare, which began in 1966, provides health care for those 65
years of age and older, certain disabled persons, and those with kidney
failure. (8) It includes Hospital Insurance (Part A) and Supplementary
Medical Insurance (Part B). Medicare Advantage (Part C) that gives
Medicare enrollees the option of receiving their Medicare benefits
through private insurance plans was added in 1997, and prescription drug coverage (Part D) through private plans was added in 2006. Contributing
to Medicare's growth since 1966 have been rapid enrollment
increases, averaging 2.1 percent from 1966 to 2009, more than twice as
fast as the 1.0 percent average increase in the U.S. population.
Medicare Part A enrollment was 46.2 million in 2009, more than twice the
1966 enrollment of 19.1 million. (9) This reflects a high rate of growth
in the population 65 years and older as well as expansion of Medicare
coverage in 1973 to include permanently disabled persons and those with
kidney failure. The share of the U.S. population aged 65 and over
increased from 9.5 percent in 1966 to 12.9 percent in 2009. (10)
Especially notable has been the very rapid growth of those 75 years and
older, from 3.4 percent in 1966 to 6.1 percent in 2009. The per capita
health care spending of this group has been about twice as high, on
average, as the 65-to-74-year-old age group. (11) Enrollment of the
permanently disabled and those with kidney failure reached 8.1 million
in 2009, 17.5 percent of Medicare Part A enrollment, and was nearly 5
times the 1973 enrollment level.
Medicaid provides health care to those at low income levels, which
is determined as a percentage of the federal poverty line. It is a
federal-state partnership program in which participating states receive
federal grants for those eligible to access a defined set of medical and
long-term care benefits. Eligibility has been gradually expanded over
time, and enrollment has grown from 15 million in 1969 to 55 million in
2009, an average rate of growth of 3.3 percent, more than triple the
rate of population growth over that time. (12) Medicare and Medicaid,
which accounted for 8.3 percent of PCE for health care in 1966,
accounted for 44.1 percent in 2009.
The share of health care expenditures accounted for by private
health insurance and by private workers' compensation also
increased, from 23.9 percent in 1959 to 37.0 percent in 2009. The
percentage of the population covered by some form of private health
insurance declined from 71.1 percent in 1959 to 63.9 percent in 2009.
(13) Private health insurance benefits have grown at an average rate of
10.7 percent, accounted for by an average 0.9 percent growth in the
number of enrollees and by an average 9.7 percent growth in benefits per
enrollee. The rapid growth in benefits per enrollee reflects both the
rapid growth in health care costs and a greatly expanded scope of
coverage. In 1959, the majority of coverage was for hospitalization and
surgical insurance, and only a small percentage of enrollees were
insured for primary care or other out-of-hospital care. Since then,
health insurance has expanded to include nonhospital care, including
primary care physicians' services, dental and other professional
medical services, prescription drugs, and other health care goods and
services.
The growing importance of third-party payers for health care has
meant an increasing gap between health care costs paid directly by
consumers and the full cost of the care. The share of PCE for health
care paid for by government and private insurance has grown from 27.3
percent in 1959 to 82.4 percent in 2009. This growth has been associated
with a greater demand for health care. In contrast to the majority of
consumer goods and services in which the prices reflect the full cost to
consumers, access to health care is not based solely on ability to pay.
Research on the subject suggests that about 13 percent of the growth in
per capita health care expenditures adjusted for general price inflation
is attributable to the growth in public and private insurance, and an
additional 2 percent is attributable to the aging of the population.
(14)
There have been many advances in medical technology--improvements
in the procedures, equipment, and processes by which health care is
delivered. The development and diffusion of such technology is a major
factor in explaining the large increases in health care expenditures
relative to spending on other consumer goods and services. Examples of
advances in surgical procedures include angioplasty, joint replacements,
open-heart surgery, and laser eye surgery. Other advances include the
treatment of preterm babies using special ventilators, devices to help
infant lungs develop, neonatal intensive care, and steroids for mother
and/or baby. The development of new medical commodities and equipment
includes new drugs and medical devices such as CT scanners and
implantable defibrillators. These advances have undoubtedly improved the
quality of medical care, but the advances have in general been quite
expensive and have contributed significantly to the growth in health
care costs. Research on this issue has generally concluded that around
half of the growth in per capita inflation-adjusted health expenditures
is attributable to advances in medical technology.
Financial services and insurance
The 4.2 percentage point increase from 1959 to 2009 in the share of
PCE accounted for by financial services and insurance was primarily
attributable to financial services, which consists of imputed financial
services furnished without payment and of financial service charges,
fees, and commissions; the remainder of the increase was attributable to
health insurance (table 2). The share of PCE accounted for by financial
services increased from 1.8 percent in 1959 to 5.1 percent in 2009, and
the increase was evenly divided between imputed and direct charges. The
increased share of financial services was associated with greatly
increased holdings of regulated investment company--also known as mutual
fund--assets by households, greatly increased use of credit cards, and
large increases in the fees of banks and other depository institutions.
The share of PCE accounted for by financial services furnished
without payment increased from 1.1 percent in 1959 to 2.7 percent in
2009. These services include the services furnished without explicit
charge by commercial banks, other depository institutions, and regulated
investment companies (RICs), with RICs accounting for most of the growth
in the share of PCE. The services of RICs are measured by their
expenses, largely portfolio management fees. These services grew from
less than 0.1 percent of PCE in 1959 to 0.9 percent of PCE in 2009,
reflecting the exponential growth of household holdings of mutual fund
shares from $15.8 billion in 1959 to $5.5 trillion in 2009, a 12.4
percent annual growth rate. (15) In PCE, RIC services to persons in 2009
were $68.2 billion, or 1.2 percent of the value of household mutual fund
holdings. (16) The share of PCE accounted for by financial service
charges, fees, and commissions increased from 0.7 percent in 1959 to 2.3
percent in 2009. These services include bank and other depository
institution fees, credit card fees, securities commissions, portfolio
management and investment advisory fees, and trust, fiduciary, and
custody activities. The growth in these services was primarily accounted
for by financial service charges and fees, including credit card and
bank fees, and by portfolio management and investment advisory fees.
The growth in credit card fees reflects the tremendous growth in
the use of credit cards. Credit card fees include membership fees, late
fees, over-limit fees, cash advance fees, application fees, and setup fees. The first plastic charge card was introduced in 1958 by the
American Express Company as a travel and entertainment card for which
the balance had to be paid in full each month. In 1966, the first
general-purpose credit card was introduced by the Bank of America as the
BankAmericard, eventually becoming known as the Visa card, and a group
of credit-issuing banks joined together to form the InterBank
Association and issued a general-purpose credit card that became known
as MasterCharge and later as MasterCard. (17) Consumer holdings of
revolving credit, the type used for credit cards in which the balance
does not have to be paid each month, were $894.0 billion at the end of
2009, compared with $2.1 billion at the end of 1968, the first year of
available data, an average growth rate of 15.9 percent. (18) Credit card
fees in 2009 were $25.1 billion, 2.8 percent of outstanding balances.
The growth in bank and other depository institution service fees
reflects the development of new services and higher-than-average price
increases in existing services. New services since 1959 have included
ATMs and electronic transfers. Overdraft fees have escalated rapidly,
nearly doubling from 2000 to 2009 to a level of $38.5 billion, and these
fees now account for more than three-fourths of the charges on deposit
accounts. (19)
Clothing and footwear and food and beverages
Clothing and footwear. The share of PCE accounted for by clothing
and footwear declined to 3.2 percent in 2009 from 8.0 percent in 1959.
The decline was accounted for by slightly higher-than-average real
growth of 3.9 percent and by price increases that averaged 1.3 percent,
more than 2 percentage points less than the growth in the overall PCE
price of 3.6 percent. The low rate of price change was associated with a
large increase in the import share of clothing and footwear
expenditures.
Food and beverages. The share of PCE accounted for by food and
beverages purchased for off-premises consumption declined to 7.8 percent
in 2009 from 19.4 percent in 1959 (table 1). The large decline was
accounted for by average real growth of 1.6 percent, nearly 2 percentage
points less than total PCE growth, and by increases in food prices that
equaled the overall average of 3.6 percent. This average rate of change
of food prices was associated with a relatively small increase in the
share of food expenditures accounted for by imports.
From 1959 to 2009, real per capita food consumption grew at an
average annual rate of 0.6 percent, compared with a 2.2 percent growth
rate for PCE and disposable personal income, which is indicative of the
income-inelasticity of food consumption. (20) As incomes grow, a larger
share is spent on personal services and other discretionary items, and
the share spent on food declines. The rate of decline in the food share
of PCE slowed markedly in the most recent decade from 1999 to 2009, as
overall PCE growth slowed and as growth in food expenditures
accelerated, with higher growth in both prices and quantities.
PCE growth by decade
Real PCE growth was highest from 1959 to 1969, averaging 4.4
percent. Growth in each subsequent decade through 1999 was between 3.3
percent and 3.5 percent. From 1999 to 2009, PCE growth slowed
significantly, to an average rate of 2.4 percent (table 3). This slower
growth was accounted for by slower growth in disposable personal income
and by an increase in the personal saving rate from 3.1 percent in 1999
to 5.9 percent in 2009. During this period, growth in all PCE categories
except health care services and food and beverages slowed. PCE for motor
vehicles and parts and transportation services decreased, accounted for
primarily by decreases in expenditures for new motor vehicles, motor
vehicle maintenance and repair, and motor vehicle leasing.
Import Shares of PCE Goods
The import share of PCE goods, measured as import values as a
percentage of PCE valued in final retail or "purchasers'"
prices, increased from 2.6 percent in 1959 to 16.5 percent in 2009
(table 4). The shares of all the major categories of PCE goods except
food and beverages and gasoline and other energy goods increased by at
least 15 percentage points. (21)
The largest increase in import share was for clothing and footwear,
which increased by 28.1 percentage points from 1959 to 2009. This large
increase in the import share of PCE for clothing and footwear was
associated with a very low rate of increase in prices for clothing and
footwear, which grew by an average rate of 1.3 percent, more than 2
percentage points less than the change in overall PCE prices. In 2009,
imported clothing and footwear measured at import value accounted for
31.9 percent of PCE for clothing and footwear measured in
purchasers' prices, compared with 3.8 percent in 1959. (22) When
imported clothing and footwear are measured including
margins--transportation costs, wholesale and retail margins, and sales
taxes--the share of total PCE accounted for by imports was more than 70
percent in 2009. (23)
Other categories with large increases in shares were motor vehicles
and parts, furniture and durable household equipment, recreational goods
and vehicles, "other" durable goods, and "other"
nondurable goods. Except for "other" nondurable goods, each of
these categories had percentage increases in real PCE over the period
that were higher than total real PCE, and rates of price change that
were at least 1.1 percentage points less than the change in the overall
PCE price. (24)
The import share of motor vehicles and parts increased from 4.0
percent in 1959 to 20.3 percent in 2009; the largest import share in
2009 was accounted for by new motor vehicles. (25) The import share of
furnishings and durable household equipment increased from 1.0 percent
in 1959 to 19.6 percent in 2009. Within furnishings and durable
household equipment, the largest import share in 2009 was accounted for
by household appliances.
The import share of recreational goods and vehicles, which consists
primarily of consumer electronics, increased from 5.7 percent in 1959 to
20.7 percent in 2009. Prices for recreational goods and vehicles have
decreased by an average of 1.5 percent, while increases in real
expenditures have averaged 9.8 percent. Within recreational goods and
vehicles, the largest import shares in 2009 were accounted for by video
and audio goods, photographic equipment, and information processing equipment and media.
The import share of "other" durable goods increased from
4.0 percent in 1959 to 28.8 percent in 2009; in 2009, the largest import
shares were accounted for by jewelry and watches, luggage and similar
personal items, and telephone and facsimile equipment. The import share
of "other" nondurable goods increased from 2.0 percent in 1959
to 18.6 percent in 2009; the largest share in 2009 was accounted for by
games, toys, and hobbies.
Unlike clothing and footwear and other PCE goods categories, the
share of PCE food and beverages accounted for by imports increased only
modestly, to 6.1 percent in 2009 from 2.4 percent in 1959. The
perishable nature and finite shelf lives of many foods help account for
this modest increase in the import share. In contrast, clothing and
footwear, which are "dry goods", are not subject to spoilage,
nor are the commodities in the other PCE goods categories with large
increases in import shares.
PCE by Source of Funds
PCE includes direct expenditures by households for goods and
services, expenditures funded through government and employers, imputed
expenditures for financial services and insurance and for owner-occupied
housing, life insurance and pension fund expenses, and the expenditures
(net of sales to households) of nonprofit institutions serving
households (NPISHs).26 The share of PCE accounted for by direct
household expenditures decreased from 92.8 percent in 1959 to 70.3
percent in 2009 (chart 1). The share of PCE funded through government
and employers and by imputed expenditures increased from 4.7 percent in
1959 to 25.9 percent in 2009, while the shares accounted for by life
insurance and pensions and by NPISHs changed little between 1959 and
2009.
Expenditures funded through government increased from 0.2 percent
of PCE in 1959 to 9.7 percent in 2009. These expenditures are noncash
government social benefits in which the benefits have to be used for a
specified purpose and for which households do not receive cash income to
pay for the benefits. These noncash benefits are primarily for health
care, but they also fund food, education, and other household
expenditures.
Total health care social benefits were $887.1 billion in 2009, or
8.9 percent of total PCE, compared with 0.2 percent in 1959. Health care
social benefits accounted for 45.4 percent of PCE for health care in
2009, compared with 3.4 percent in 1959. (27) The largest sources of
health care social benefits are expenditures under the Medicare and
Medicaid programs. Medicare accounted for $500.3 billion in expenditures
in 2009, or 5.0 percent of total PCE. Medicaid accounted for $369.3
billion in expenditures in 2009, or 3.7 percent of total PCE.
The largest in-kind social benefit other than health care is the
federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which funds
food purchases. (28) The program, which started in 1961, accounted for
$54.6 billion in social benefits in 2009, or 0.5 percent of total PCE
and 8.2 percent of PCE for food and nonalcoholic beverages purchased for
off-premises consumption. Social benefits under SNAP increased 76.7
percent between 2007 and 2009, as the number of participants increased
8.8 million to 35.3 million. (29) The large increase in the number of
unemployed during that period, from 7.1 million in 2007 to 14.3 million
in 2009, contributed significantly to the increase in the number of
recipients. (30)
Employer contributions for group health insurance, which are
imputed to PCE, were $558.9 billion in 2009, or 5.6 percent of total
PCE, compared with 1.0 percent in 1959. (31) Benefits paid under this
insurance are included in PCE for health care, and premiums net of
benefits are included in PCE for insurance. Although the expansion of
employer coverage accounted for most of the growth from 1960 through the
mid-1980s, changes in employer contributions over the past 25 years have
been primarily driven by changes in health insurance premium rates,
because the percentage of workers receiving health insurance through
their employers has actually decreased. Benefits paid under private
health insurance in PCE, including employee-paid and individually
purchased insurance, were $706.6 billion in 2009, 35.8 percent of PCE
for health care, compared with 22.1 percent in 1959. Private
workers' compensation benefits for medical care were $23.6 billion
in 2009, 1.2 percent of PCE for health. Together, health care social
benefits and private insurance benefits accounted for 82.4 percent of
PCE for health care in 2009, compared with 27.3 percent in 1959.
The share of PCE accounted for by imputations for owner-occupied
housing, financial and insurance services, food produced and consumed on
farms, and employer provision of food, clothing, and lodging increased
from 3.1 percent in 1959 to 10.1 percent in 2009. The share of
imputations for owner-occupied housing in PCE was 1.2 percent in 1959
and 7.5 percent in 2009, and the share varied significantly over that
period, ranging from a low of 0.7 percent in 1978 to its high in 2009.
Imputed expenditures for owner-occupied housing in PCE are estimated as
the imputed rental value of owner-occupied housing less intermediate
expenses for repair and maintenance and investment in owner-occupied
residential structures. (32) Both the rental value of owner-occupied
housing and intermediate expenses have grown at relatively stable rates
over time, and most of the variation in imputed expenditures for
owner-occupied housing has been accounted for by changes in
owner-occupied investment. Generally, the share of PCE accounted for by
the imputation for owner-occupied housing decreased during expansions,
as owner-occupied housing investment increased, and the share increased
during recessions. The share ranged from 0.7 percent and 5.1 percent
between 1959 and 2001. It reached a level of 4.3 percent in the
recession year of 2001, before falling sharply between 2001 and 2005, as
large increases in owner-occupied investment resulted in a reduction in
the imputed expenditures share to 2.0 percent. A 57.3 percent decrease
in owner-occupied investment between 2005 and 2009 pushed the
owner-occupied housing imputation share to its record high in 2009.
Cyclical Patterns of Change in Real PCE
In the each of the eight recessions since 1960, percent changes in
real PCE have been more moderate than changes in gross domestic
purchases. Real PCE has decreased less than gross domestic purchases in
five of those recessions, and it actually increased in the other three
recessions. PCE for services has been the most important factor in
explaining these relative patterns; PCE for services increased in six of
the recessions and decreased less than 0.5 percent in the other two
recessions. In contrast, PCE for durable goods decreased in all but two
of the recessions, and PCE for nondurable goods decreased in four of the
recessions. In the three recessions since 1990, the rate of change in
PCE for services has been significantly smaller than in the five
recessions from 1960 to 1982. In the three most recent recessions, PCE
for services growth has averaged 0.2 percent, compared with an average
of 2.5 percent in the earlier recessions.
The decline in real PCE during the 2007-2009 recession continued
for 16 months, a longer period than in any of the previous recessions
back to 1960, and the 2.6 percent decrease in real PCE was larger than
in all but one of those recessions (chart 2). The subsequent recovery in
PCE relative to its previous peak has been slower than during any of the
previous recoveries back to 1960. Real PCE in the 2007-2009 recession
did not surpass its previous peak until October 2010, 34 months after
the start of the recession, and on a per capita basis, the previous peak
still had not been surpassed as of April 2011, 40 months after the start
of the recession. In contrast, during each of the previous recessions
back to 1960, real PCE either increased during the recession or
surpassed its previous peak within 18 months of the start of the
recession.
Factors Affecting the Personal Saving Rate
The personal saving rate, personal saving as a percentage of
disposable personal income (DPI), changed by as much as 2 percentage
points each year between 1959 and 2009, but there have been two clear
trends (chart 3). From 1959 to 1982, the personal saving rate trended
upward, and from 1982 to 2007, it trended steeply downward. From a rate
of 7.5 percent in 1959, the personal saving rate trended upward until
reaching a peak of 10.9 percent in 1982. After 1982, the saving rate
trended down, reaching a low of 1.4 percent in 2005, and it then
remained at around 2 percent through 2007. In 2008 and 2009, during the
most recent recession, the personal saving rate increased about 2
percentage points each year, reaching 5.9 percent in 2009.
Changes in the saving rate are inversely related to changes in
household net worth as a percentage of DPI. (33) Capital gains and
losses from household holdings of real estate and financial assets affect the level of household net worth, but are not part of personal
income or personal saving in the NIPAs. The ratio of household net worth
to DPI typically rises during periods in which household real estate and
financial assets are appreciating in value, and falls when these assets
are losing value. As household assets appreciate, incentives to save
from current income are lessened, while incentives to save are increased
during periods of falling asset values. From 1959 to 1982, the personal
saving rate increased 3.4 percentage points, and household net worth as
a percentage of DPI fell 12.3 percent, from 500.8 percent in 1959 to
439.0 percent in 1982. From 1982 to 2007, household net worth as a
percentage of DPI increased 41.9 percent to 623.0 percent in 2007, as
the personal saving rate decreased from 10.9 percent to 2.1 percent.
From 2007 to 2009, the ratio of household net worth to DPI decreased
25.1 percent to 466.6 percent in 2009, as the personal saving rate
increased from 2.1 percent to 5.9 percent.
[GRAPHIC 2 OMITTED]
In 2008 and 2009, the ratio of household net worth to DPI returned
to a range that prevailed in 1959-69 when the personal saving rate
ranged from 7.2 percent to 9.4 percent; however, the personal saving
rate may not return to that range because of the increasing importance
of third-party expenditures and imputed expenditures. Expenditures
funded through government and employers, imputed expenditures for
services furnished without payment by banks and other depository
institutions, expenditures for the services of regulated investment
companies, and premium supplements for property and casualty insurance
all have matching counterparts in personal income. (34) Because these
incomes are not subject to tax, changes in the corresponding
expenditures change DPI and PCE by the same amount. The level of
personal saving is not affected, but the personal saving rate is raised
if these in-kind transfer payments and employer insurance contributions
are excluded, and it is lowered if these incomes are included.
Housing investment and household net lending and net borrowing
Personal saving from owner-occupied housing is the difference
between gross investment in owner-occupied housing (including margins on
owner-built housing) and the depreciation at current cost (consumption
of fixed capital) of owner-occupied housing. (35) Personal saving from
owner-occupied housing has varied widely over time, ranging from 1.7
percent of DPI in 1982 to 5.4 percent in 2005. Like PCE imputations for
owner-occupied housing, the variations are largely associated with
cyclical changes in gross investment. Personal saving from
owner-occupied housing increased from 3.6 percent of DPI in 2001 to 5.4
percent of DPI in 2005 as gross investment increased 68.1 percent from
2001 to 2005. As a result of a 57.3 percent decrease in gross investment
in owner-occupied housing in 2005-2009, personal saving from
owner-occupied housing decreased, reaching 0.8 percent of DPI in 2009,
the lowest recorded in 1959-2009.
The difference between total personal saving and personal saving
from owner-occupied housing equals net lending or net borrowing by
households from other sectors, as shown in the integrated macroeconomic accounts of the United States. (36) Households were net lenders to other
sectors from 1960 to 1998, but beginning in 1999, they became net
borrowers, with net borrowing reaching a peak of $372.0 billion in 2005
(chart 4). They remained net borrowers through 2007. In 2008, households
again became net lenders, and in 2009, net lending reached $555.5
billion, as net saving in the integrated macroeconomic accounts rose to
$666.3 billion and as net capital formation decreased to $110.8 billion,
compared with the peak of $526.7 billion in 2005. (37)
[GRAPHIC 3 OMITTED]
[GRAPHIC 4 OMITTED]
(1.) Gross domestic purchases--a measure of purchases by U.S.
residents regardless of where the purchased goods and services were
produced--is calculated as the sum of personal consumption expenditures,
gross private domestic investment, and government consumption
expenditures and gross investment; thus, gross domestic purchases
includes imports of goods and services but excludes exports of goods and
services.
(2.) M1 growth rates cited in this article are average annual
percent changes.
(3.) Personal outlays consists of PCE, personal interest payments,
and personal current transfer payments. Personal interest payments
consist of non-mortgage interest paid by households. Personal current
transfer payments include payments to general government and to rest of
the world. Payments to general government primarily consist of
donations, fees, and fines that are paid by households and nonprofit
institutions serving households (NPISHs). Current transfer payments to
the rest of the world primarily consist of cash and in-kind transfers to
foreign residents by households and NPISHs.
(4.) Recession and business cycle dating is done by the National
Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). According to NBER, the peak of the
business cycle was December 2007, and the trough--the last month of the
recession-was June 2009; see "U.S. Business Cycle Expansions and
Contractions" (a table); www.nber.org.
(5.) All discussion of PCE shares is in current-dollar terms. PCE
shares cannot be calculated in chained dollars because estimates of real
PCE are not additive.
(6.) Food expenditures in PCE goods are for food and beverages
purchased for off-premise consumption at grocery stores and similar
establishments; prepared meals and snacks served at restaurants and
similar establishments are included in PCE for services.
(7.) Estimates of out-of-pocket spending for PCE health care are
not published in the NIPAs. They are estimated as a residual equal to
total PCE health care less medical and hospitalization insurance benefits, less private workers' compensation medical benefits, and
less government social benefits for medical care.
(8.) Medicare is designated as "hospital and supplementary
medical insurance" in the NIPAs. See line 6 in NIPA "Table
3.12. Government Social Benefits"; www.bea.gov/national.
(9.) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, "Medicare:
National Enrollment Trends 1966-2009" (a table); www.cms.gov.
(10.) Census Bureau, "Table 1. Annual Estimates of the
Resident Population by Sex and Five-Year Age Groups for the United
States: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2009'; and "Resident
Population Plus Armed Forces Overseas--Estimates by Age, Sex, and Race:
July 1, 1966" (a table); www.census.gov.
(11.) Ellen Meara, Chapin White, and David M. Cutler, "Trends
in Medical Care Spending by Age, 1963-2000," Health Affairs 23, no.
4 (July 2004): 176-183.
(12.) Kaiser Family Foundation, "Medicaid: A Timeline of Key
Developments"; www.kff.org.
(13.) Census Bureau, Persons Covered by Private Health Insurance
for Hospital and Surgical Benefits, Series B401 in Historical Statistics
of the United States: Colonial Times to 1970, Part I: 82;
www2.census.gov. Census Bureau," Table C-1 Health Insurance
Coverage: 1987 to 2009, in Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance
Coverage in the United States: 2009 (September 2010): 71;
www.census.gov.
(14.) General price inflation as measured by the gross domestic
product (GDP) price index. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
"Table 6: Research on Causal Factors Accounting for Growth in Real
Per Capita Health Care Spending," Review of Assumptions and Methods
of the Medicare Trustees' Financial Projections (December 2000):
32; www.cms.gov.
(15.) Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Flow of
Funds Accounts of the United States (Statistical Release Z.1, table
"B.100 Balance Sheet of Households and Nonprofit
Organizations" for 2009 and 1959, www.federalreserve.gov. Holdings
include those of nonprofit organizations and combine mutual fund shares
and money market fund shares.
(16.) RIC services to pension funds are also included in PCE.
(17.) Information is from "The History of Credit Cards";
www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/credit-cards- history_1264.php.
(18.) Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
"Consumer Credit" (Federal Reserve Statistical Release G.19)
for 2009 and for 1968; www.federalreserve.gov.
(19.) Saskia Scholtes and Francesco Guerrerra, "Banks Make
$38bn From Overdraft Fees," Financial Times (August 9, 2009).
(20.) Real per capita PCE and disposable personal income are from
NIPA "Table 7.1 Selected Per Capita Product and Income Series in
Current and Chained Dollars." Real per capita food consumption is
derived by multiplying the quantity index for food and beverages
purchased for off-premises consumption from NIPA "Table 2.4.3 Real
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Quantity
Indexes" by the 2005 current-dollar value of that consumption and
dividing by population estimates from Table 7.1; www.bea.gov.
(21.) Imports in PCE are measured using finished goods only. The
import share of gasoline and other energy goods increased from 0.4
percent in 1959 to 4.1 percent in 2009. Although the import share of
crude oil increased by a large amount over this period, this is an
"intermediate" good rather than a "final" good and
is not included in the calculation of import shares in PCE.
(22.) Imports in PCE are not published in the NIPAs. They are
estimated using the import share of the supply of the commodity from
domestic production and imports available for domestic sale applied to
PCE, calculated using producers' values (domestic
manufacturers' values and import values exclusive of trade and
transportation margins and sales taxes), based on benchmark input-output
estimates, with interpolation and extrapolation using detailed import
data.
(23.) The retail values of imported clothing and footwear in PCE
are not published in the NIPAs. They are estimated by applying the
margin rates (the ratios of purchasers' to producers' values)
from the 2002 Input-Output estimates for clothing and footwear to the
corresponding import values.
(24.) "Other" nondurable goods had quantity and price
increases that were equal to overall PCE.
(25.) This includes imports from Canada and Mexico, though in the
presentation of the motor vehicle estimates these are classified as
"domestic" sales.
(26.) PCE also includes small imputations for employment-related
in-kind goods and services and for food produced and consumed on farms.
(27.) The actual share may be slightly lower because a small amount
of these benefits fund social assistance expenditures in PCE. See Micah
B.
Hartman, Robert J. Kornfeld, and Aaron C. Catlin, "A
Reconciliation of Health Care Expenditures in the National Health
Expenditures Accounts and in Gross Domestic Product," SURVEY OF
CURRENT BUSINESS 90 (September 2010): 42-52; www.bea.gov.
(28.) Before October 2008, the program funding food-related
benefits was known as Food Stamps.
(29.) Average monthly participants are from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture "SNAP Monthly Data"; www.fns.usda.gov. Since 2009,
the number of food stamp recipients has continued to increase, to 44.6
million in March 2011, 14.3 percent of the U.S. population.
(30.) The annual average number of unemployed persons is from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics; www.bls.gov.
(31.) Imputations in PCE are in NIPA "Table 7.12 Imputations
in the National Income and Product Accounts"; www.bea.gov.
Employers also pay life insurance premiums for employees, but these are
not considered here, because PCE for life insurance is not measured by
premiums. Employer contributions for private workers' compensation,
whose premiums are entirely paid by employers, account for about 0.5
percent of total PCE.
(32.) Investment in owner-occupied structures includes
owner-occupant purchases of new single-family dwellings, including
manufactured homes, expenditures on improvements, and payments of
brokers' commissions on the sale of new and existing dwellings,
less sales of dwellings to government. Mortgage interest and property
taxes paid are also included as owner-occupant expenses and are
subtracted from the PCE rental value of owner-occupied housing in
determining the rental income from owner-occupied housing, which is part
of personal income.
(33.) Federal Reserve Table B.IO0. Net worth also includes
nonprofit organizations.
(34.) Employer contributions for health insurance and for
workers' compensation are included in supplements to wages and
salaries, part of employee compensation in personal income. Noncash
government social benefits are part of personal current transfer
receipts in personal income. For the imputed expenditures, there is
corresponding imputed interest income, which is part of personal
interest income in personal income. Premium supplements are equal to
property and casualty insurance companies' expected earnings on
technical reserves.
(35.) See NIPA table 7.12.
(36.) These accounts include some minor adjustments for capital
transfers and acquisition (disposition) of nonfinancial assets and
include structures owned by nonprofit institutions serving households.
See "Table S.3.a Households and Nonprofit Institutions Serving
Households"; www.bea.gov.
(37.) Net saving excludes capital transfers. Net saving in the
integrated macroeconomic accounts differs by small amounts from personal
saving in the NIPAs.
Table 1. Contributions to Percent Change, Average Annual Growth,
and Shares of PCE by Major Type of Product
1959 to 2009
Contribution
to percent
change
in real PCE
(percentage
Line points)
1 PCE (1) 3.4 (1)
2 Goods 1.46
3 Durable goods 0.71
4 Motor vehicles and parts 0.21
5 Furnishings and durable
household equipment 0.15
6 Recreational goods and
vehicles 0.28
7 Other durable goods 0.07
8 Nondurable goods 0.75
9 Food and beverages
purchased for off
premises consumption 0.20
10 Clothing and footwear 0.22
11 Gasoline and other
energy goods 0.05
12 Other nondurable goods 0.27
13 Services 1.94
14 Household consumption
expenditures 1.81
15 Housing and utilities 0.57
16 Health care 0.37
17 Transportation services 0.10
18 Recreation services 0.12
19 Food services and
accommodations 0.16
Financial services and
20 insurance 0.23
21 Other services 0.25
22 Final consumption
expenditures of
nonprofit institutions
serving households 0.13
1959 to 2009
Average annual growth
(percent)
Current
Line Quantity (1) Price dollars
1 PCE (1) 3.4 3.6 7.1
2 Goods 3.4 2.6 6.0
3 Durable goods 5.2 1.2 6.5
4 Motor vehicles and parts 3.5 2.3 5.8
5 Furnishings and durable
household equipment 4.1 1.5 5.7
6 Recreational goods and
vehicles 9.8 -1.5 8.1
7 Other durable goods 4.6 2.5 7.3
8 Nondurable goods 2.5 3.3 5.9
9 Food and beverages
purchased for off
premises consumption 1.6 3.6 5.2
10 Clothing and footwear 3.9 1.3 5.2
11 Gasoline and other
energy goods 1.5 4.6 6.2
12 Other nondurable goods 3.4 3.6 7.1
13 Services 3.5 4.4 8.0
14 Household consumption
expenditures 3.4 4.5 8.0
15 Housing and utilities 3.2 4.0 7.4
16 Health care 3.9 5.7 9.9
17 Transportation services 3.0 4.1 7.3
18 Recreation services 4.6 3.9 8.7
19 Food services and
accommodations 2.5 4.4 7.1
Financial services and
20 insurance 3.9 4.6 8.7
21 Other services 3.1 4.3 7.4
22 Final consumption
expenditures of
nonprofit institutions
serving households 6.7 1.4 8.2
Share of current-dollar
PCE (percent)
Change
Line 1959 2009 in share
1 PCE (1) 100.0 100.0 ...
2 Goods 54.3 32.3 -22.0
3 Durable goods 14.1 10.3 -3.9
4 Motor vehicles and parts 5.9 3.2 -2.7
5 Furnishings and durable
household equipment 4.9 2.5 -2.4
6 Recreational goods and
vehicles 2.0 3.2 1.2
7 Other durable goods 1.3 1.4 0.1
8 Nondurable goods 40.2 22.0 -18.2
9 Food and beverages
purchased for off
premises consumption 19.4 7.8 -11.6
10 Clothing and footwear 8.0 3.2 -4.8
11 Gasoline and other
energy goods 4.8 3.0 -1.8
12 Other nondurable goods 8.0 8.0 0.0
13 Services 45.7 67.7 22.0
14 Household consumption
expenditures 44.1 65.1 21.0
15 Housing and utilities 16.6 18.8 2.1
16 Health care 4.7 16.2 11.6
17 Transportation services 2.7 2.9 0.2
18 Recreation services 1.9 3.8 1.9
19 Food services and
accommodations 6.2 6.0 -0.2
Financial services and
20 insurance 3.9 8.1 4.2
21 Other services 8.0 9.3 1.2
22 Final consumption
expenditures of
nonprofit institutions
serving households 1.6 2.6 1.0
(1.) Percent change in real PCE
Table 2. Financial Services and Insurance Shares of PCE
[Percent of current-dollar PCE]
Change
1959 2009 in share
Financial services and insurance 3.9 8.1 4.2
Financial services 1.8 5.1 3.3
Financial services furnished without
payment 1.1 2.7 1.6
Commercial banks and other
depository institutions 1.1 1.4 0.3
Regulated investment companies * 0.9 0.9
Pension funds * 0.4 0.4
Financial service charges, fees,
and commissions 0.7 2.3 1.7
Financial service charges and fees 0.2 1.0 0.7
Securities commissions 0.4 0.4 0.0
Portfolio management, investment
advice services, and trust,
fiduciary, and custody activities 0.1 1.0 1.0
Insurance 2.2 3.1 0.9
Medical care and hospitalization
insurance 0.2 1.4 1.2
Other insurance 1.9 1.7 -0.2
* Less 0.05 percent.
Table 3. Real PCE Growth by Decades
[Average annual percent change]
1959 to 1969 to 1979 to
1969 1979 1989
PCE 4.4 3.5 3.3
Goods 4.2 3.0 3.1
Durable goods 6.4 4.8 4.9
Motor vehicles and parts 6.4 3.8 4.5
Furnishings and durable household
equipment 4.8 4.3 3.4
Recreational goods and vehicles 10.1 7.1 8.3
Other durable goods 6.3 5.9 3.9
Nondurable goods 3.3 2.2 2.3
Food and beverages purchased
for off premises consumption 2.5 1.1 1.5
Clothing and footwear 3.4 4.4 5.0
Gasoline and other energy goods 3.4 1.7 0.8
Other nondurable goods 5.0 3.0 2.6
Services 4.7 4.0 3.4
Household consumption expenditures 4.7 4.0 3.1
Housing and utilities 5.0 4.0 2.6
Health care 6.2 5.2 2.8
Transportation services 4.7 3.4 3.3
Recreation services 4.8 5.6 6.4
Food services and accommodations 3.2 3.5 2.6
Financial services and insurance 4.1 5.1 4.0
Other services 4.2 2.3 3.4
Final consumption expenditures of
nonprofit institutions serving
households 5.3 3.2 11.6
Addendum
Real disposable personal income 4.5 3.6 3.1
1989 to 1999 to
1999 2009
PCE 3.3 2.4
Goods 3.8 2.7
Durable goods 5.9 3.8
Motor vehicles and parts 3.4 -0.6
Furnishings and durable household
equipment 4.3 3.8
Recreational goods and vehicles 12.9 10.5
Other durable goods 4.3 2.8
Nondurable goods 2.6 2.0
Food and beverages purchased
for off premises consumption 1.3 1.6
Clothing and footwear 3.9 2.9
Gasoline and other energy goods 1.7 -0.2
Other nondurable goods 3.8 2.8
Services 3.1 2.2
Household consumption expenditures 2.9 2.1
Housing and utilities 2.6 1.9
Health care 2.2 3.3
Transportation services 4.7 -0.9
Recreation services 4.5 1.8
Food services and accommodations 1.8 1.6
Financial services and insurance 4.3 2.1
Other services 3.3 2.2
Final consumption expenditures of
nonprofit institutions serving
households 8.8 4.5
Addendum
Real disposable personal income 3.0 2.7
Table 4. Import Shares of PCE by Major Type of Product
Line 1959 1969 1979 1989
1 PCE 1.9 2.6 4.1 5.3
2 Goods 2.6 3.8 7.5 11.0
3 Durable goods 3.2 6.1 12.0 16.1
4 Motor vehicles and parts 4.0 5.9 12.9 16.8
5 Furnishings and durable
household equipment 1.0 2.7 5.4 8.8
6 Recreational goods
and vehicles 5.7 10.2 17.8 20.4
7 Other durable goods 4.0 9.2 15.3 21.4
8 Nondurable goods 2.4 2.9 5.5 8.3
9 Food and beverages
purchased for off
premises consumption 2.4 2.7 4.1 3.5
10 Clothing and footwear 3.8 5.1 11.5 21.1
11 Gasoline and other energy
goods 0.4 0.4 3.0 1.9
12 Other nondurable goods 2.0 2.4 5.0 8.3
13 Services 1.2 1.3 1.2 1.5
14 Household consumption
expenditures 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.6
15 Housing and utilities 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.0
16 Health care 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
17 Transportation services 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0
18 Recreation services 0.4 0.1 0.1 0.1
Food services and
19 accommodations 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0
Financial services
20 and insurance 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.7
21 Other services 6.3 7.4 8.6 11.4
22 Final consumption
expenditures of nonprofit
institutions serving
households 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Change
in share
1959 to
Line 1999 2009 2009
1 PCE 6.3 6.2 4.3
2 Goods 14.6 16.5 13.9
3 Durable goods 19.7 21.4 18.2
4 Motor vehicles and parts 21.3 20.3 16.3
5 Furnishings and durable
household equipment 13.6 19.6 18.6
6 Recreational goods
and vehicles 20.8 20.7 15.0
7 Other durable goods 23.4 28.8 24.8
8 Nondurable goods 11.5 14.2 11.8
9 Food and beverages
purchased for off
premises consumption 4.5 6.1 3.7
10 Clothing and footwear 28.0 31.9 28.1
11 Gasoline and other energy
goods 2.0 4.1 3.7
12 Other nondurable goods 12.5 18.6 16.6
13 Services 1.7 1.3 0.1
14 Household consumption
expenditures 1.7 1.3 0.1
15 Housing and utilities 0.1 0.1 0.0
16 Health care 0.0 0.0 0.0
17 Transportation services 0.2 0.5 0.0
18 Recreation services 0.1 0.4 0.0
Food services and
19 accommodations 0.1 0.0 0.0
Financial services
20 and insurance 0.1 0.0 0.0
21 Other services 11.9 8.8 2.5
22 Final consumption
expenditures of nonprofit
institutions serving
households 0.0 0.0 0.0
NOTE. Import value as a percentage of retail PCE value
Chart 1. Shares of Personal Consumption Expenditures by
Source of Funds
1959 2009
Direct household expenditures 92.8% 70.3%
Imputations excluding NPISHs
and employer contributions
for group health insurance 3.1% 10.1%
In-kind social benefits 0.2% 9.7%
Employer contributions for
group health insurance and
workers' compensation 1.4% 6.1%
Life insurance and pension fund
expenses 1.0% 1.2%
Final consumption expenditures
of NPISHs 1.6% 2.6%
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
Note: Table made from pie chart.