Author Topic: Consumer borrowing climbs at sharp pace  (Read 551 times)

Bindare_Dundat

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Consumer borrowing climbs at sharp pace
« on: May 08, 2008, 06:29:09 PM »
 Consumer borrowing rose in March at the fastest pace in four months, more than double the increase of the previous month, in what was seen as a sign of rising economic stress.

The Federal Reserve reported yesterday that consumers increased their borrowing at an annual rate of 7.2 percent, compared with a 3.1 percent rate of increase in February. The gain was much larger than economists had been expecting and reflected strong borrowing on credit cards and also in the category that includes loans for automobiles.

The increase in consumer debt totaled $15.3 billion at an annual rate in March, much bigger than the $6 billion increase that economists had been expecting. Economists said consumers were being forced to make greater use of their credit cards during difficult economic times when they are being battered by job losses, soaring gasoline prices and higher food costs.

War-Horse

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Re: Consumer borrowing climbs at sharp pace
« Reply #1 on: May 09, 2008, 09:38:35 PM »
Consumer borrowing rose in March at the fastest pace in four months, more than double the increase of the previous month, in what was seen as a sign of rising economic stress.

The Federal Reserve reported yesterday that consumers increased their borrowing at an annual rate of 7.2 percent, compared with a 3.1 percent rate of increase in February. The gain was much larger than economists had been expecting and reflected strong borrowing on credit cards and also in the category that includes loans for automobiles.

The increase in consumer debt totaled $15.3 billion at an annual rate in March, much bigger than the $6 billion increase that economists had been expecting. Economists said consumers were being forced to make greater use of their credit cards during difficult economic times when they are being battered by job losses, soaring gasoline prices and higher food costs.





There you go.  Buying food and gas on credit....damn.