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Wednesday


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CONTACT THE HERALD
Mike Benbow, Business Editor
benbow@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Consumer borrowing drops for first time since '98

WASHINGTON -- Consumer borrowing fell in August for the first time in more than a decade as households, battered by rising job layoffs and the decaying economy, cut back sharply on their use of credit.

The Federal Reserve said today that consumer borrowing fell at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in August, before the financial crisis became acute in September, forcing the government to approve a $700 billion rescue of the financial industry.

August's decline in consumer credit marked the first time that total borrowing had fallen since a 4.3 percent rate of decline in January 1998.

The weakness reflected a big decline of 5.4 percent at an annual rate in the category that includes auto loans and a 0.8 percent rate of decline in the category that includes credit cards.

The 3.7 percent rate of decline for overall borrowing followed a 2.4 percent rate of increase in borrowing in July.

Consumer borrowing, which the Fed defines as all loans not secured by real estate, totaled $2.58 trillion at an annual rate in August, down by $7.88 billion from the July level. That was a much weaker performance than the $5.25 billion increase in borrowing that economists had been expecting.

Economists are worried that consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of total economic activity, will decline in the July-September quarter. That has not happened since 1991 and could set the stage for the economy to slip into a recession.

The economy is being battered at the moment by rising job layoffs, a prolonged housing slump and the most severe credit squeeze in decades as banks cut back on their lending in the face of record defaults for home mortgages.

The 5.4 percent drop at an annual rate in the category that includes auto loans, reflected the struggles automakers are having this year as the weak economy and soaring gas prices have cut into sales.

The 0.8 percent rate of decline in borrowing in the category that covers credit cards followed a 5 percent jump in this category in July.

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