indicator historical data chart

United States Consumer Confidence

In the United States, consumer confidence declined to 50 in July of 2010 from 54 in June of 2010. In the United States, the consumer confidence survey measures the level of optimism that consumers have about the performance of the economy. Generally consumer confidence is high when the unemployment rate is low and GDP growth is high. Measures of average consumer confidence can be useful indicators of how much consumers are likely to spend. This page includes: United States Consumer Confidence chart, historical data and news.


CountryInterest RateGrowth RateInflation RateJobless RateCurrent AccountExchange Rate
United States 0.25%1.60%1.20%9.60%-10982.9200


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United States Consumer Confidence 7/31/2010 50.4 6/30/2010 54.3 5/31/2010 62.7 4/30/2010 57.7 3/31/2010 52.3 2/28/2010 46.4 1/31/2010 56.5 12/31/2009 53.6 11/30/2009 50.6 10/31/2009 48.7 9/30/2009 53.4 8/31/2009 54.5 7/31/2009 47.4 6/30/2009 49.3 5/31/2009 54.8 4/30/2009 40.8 3/31/2009 26.9 2/28/2009 25.3 1/31/2009 37.4 12/31/2008 38.6 11/30/2008 44.7 10/31/2008 38.8 9/30/2008 61.4 8/31/2008 58.5 7/31/2008 51.9 6/30/2008 51 5/31/2008 58.1 4/30/2008 62.8 3/31/2008 65.9 2/29/2008 76.4 1/31/2008 87.3 12/31/2007 90.6 11/30/2007 87.8 10/31/2007 95.2 9/30/2007 99.5 8/31/2007 105.6 7/31/2007 111.9 6/30/2007 105.3 5/31/2007 108.5 4/30/2007 106.3 3/31/2007 108.2 2/28/2007 111.2 1/31/2007 110.2 12/31/2006 110 11/30/2006 105.3 10/31/2006 105.1 9/30/2006 105.9 8/31/2006 100.2 7/31/2006 107 6/30/2006 105.4 5/31/2006 104.7 4/30/2006 109.8 3/31/2006 107.5 2/28/2006 102.7 1/31/2006 106.8 12/31/2005 103.8 11/30/2005 98.3 10/31/2005 85.2 9/30/2005 87.5 8/31/2005 105.5 7/31/2005 103.6 6/30/2005 106.2 5/31/2005 103.1 4/30/2005 97.5 3/31/2005 103 2/28/2005 104.4 1/31/2005 105.1 12/31/2004 102.7 11/30/2004 92.6 10/31/2004 92.9 9/30/2004 96.7 8/31/2004 98.7 7/31/2004 105.7 6/30/2004 102.8 5/31/2004 93.1 4/30/2004 93 3/31/2004 88.5 2/29/2004 88.5 1/31/2004 97.7 12/31/2003 94.8 11/30/2003 92.5 10/31/2003 81.7 9/30/2003 77 8/31/2003 81.7 7/31/2003 77 6/30/2003 83.5 5/31/2003 83.6 4/30/2003 81 3/31/2003 61.4 2/28/2003 64.8 1/31/2003 78.8 12/31/2002 80.7 11/30/2002 84.9 10/31/2002 79.6 9/30/2002 93.7 8/31/2002 94.5 7/31/2002 97.4 6/30/2002 106.3 5/31/2002 110.3 4/30/2002 108.5 3/31/2002 110.7 2/28/2002 95 1/31/2002 97.8 12/31/2001 94.6 11/30/2001 84.9 10/31/2001 85.3 9/30/2001 97 8/31/2001 114 7/31/2001 116.3 6/30/2001 118.9 5/31/2001 116.1 4/30/2001 109.9 3/31/2001 116.9 2/28/2001 109.2 1/31/2001 115.7 12/31/2000 128.6 11/30/2000 132.6 10/31/2000 135.8 9/30/2000 142.5 8/31/2000 140.8 7/31/2000 143 6/30/2000 139.2 5/31/2000 144.7 4/30/2000 137.7 3/31/2000 137.1 2/29/2000 140.8 1/31/2000 144.7 12/31/1999 141.7 11/30/1999 137 10/31/1999 130.5 9/30/1999 134.2 8/31/1999 136 7/31/1999 136.2 6/30/1999 139 5/31/1999 137.7 4/30/1999 135.5 3/31/1999 134 2/28/1999 133.1 1/31/1999 128.9 12/31/1998 126.7 11/30/1998 126.4 10/31/1998 119.3 9/30/1998 126.4 8/31/1998 133.1 7/31/1998 137.2 6/30/1998 138.2 5/31/1998 136.3 4/30/1998 137.2 3/31/1998 133.8 2/28/1998 137.4 1/31/1998 128.3 12/31/1997 136.2 11/30/1997 128.1 10/31/1997 123.4 9/30/1997 130.2 8/31/1997 127.6 7/31/1997 126.3 6/30/1997 129.9 5/31/1997 127.9 4/30/1997 118.5 3/31/1997 118.5 2/28/1997 118.9 1/31/1997 118.7 12/31/1996 114.2 11/30/1996 109.5 10/31/1996 107.3 9/30/1996 111.8 8/31/1996 112 7/31/1996 107 6/30/1996 100.1 5/31/1996 103.5 4/30/1996 104.8 3/31/1996 98.4 2/29/1996 98 1/31/1996 88.4 12/31/1995 99.2 11/30/1995 101.6 10/31/1995 96.3 9/30/1995 97.3 8/31/1995 102.4 7/31/1995 101.4 6/30/1995 94.6 5/31/1995 102 4/30/1995 104.6 3/31/1995 100.2 2/28/1995 99.4 1/31/1995 101.4 12/31/1994 103.4 11/30/1994 100.4 10/31/1994 89.1 9/30/1994 89.5 8/31/1994 90.4 7/31/1994 91.3 6/30/1994 92.5 5/31/1994 88.9 4/30/1994 92.1 3/31/1994 86.7 2/28/1994 79.9 1/31/1994 82.6 12/31/1993 79.8 11/30/1993 71.9 10/31/1993 60.5 9/30/1993 63.8 8/31/1993 59.3 7/31/1993 59.2 6/30/1993 58.6 5/31/1993 61.9 4/30/1993 67.6 3/31/1993 63.2 2/28/1993 68.5 1/31/1993 76.7 12/31/1992 78.1 11/30/1992 65.6 10/31/1992 54.6 9/30/1992 57.3 8/31/1992 59 7/31/1992 61.2 6/30/1992 72.6 5/31/1992 71.9 4/30/1992 65.1 3/31/1992 56.5 2/29/1992 47.3 1/31/1992 50.2 12/31/1991 52.5 11/30/1991 52.7 10/31/1991 60.1 9/30/1991 72.9 8/31/1991 76.1 7/31/1991 77.7 6/30/1991 78 5/31/1991 76.4 4/30/1991 79.4 3/31/1991 81.1 2/28/1991 59.4 1/31/1991 55.1 12/31/1990 61.2 11/30/1990 61.7 10/31/1990 62.6 9/30/1990 85.6 8/31/1990 84.7 7/31/1990 101.7 6/30/1990 102.4 5/31/1990 107.3 4/30/1990 107.3 3/31/1990 110.6 2/28/1990 106.7 1/31/1990 106.5 12/31/1989 113 11/30/1989 115.1 10/31/1989 117 9/30/1989 116.3 8/31/1989 115.4 7/31/1989 120.4 6/30/1989 117.2 5/31/1989 116.7 4/30/1989 116.6 3/31/1989 117.4 2/28/1989 120.7 1/31/1989 115.8 12/31/1988 119.4 11/30/1988 112.9 10/31/1988 116.9 9/30/1988 110.7 8/31/1988 119.7 7/31/1988 113.5 6/30/1988 115.7 5/31/1988 120.2 4/30/1988 115.7 3/31/1988 112.7 2/29/1988 114.9 1/31/1988 109.9 12/31/1987 107.7 11/30/1987 100.8 10/31/1987 115.1 9/30/1987 115.7 8/31/1987 110.7 7/31/1987 105.8 6/30/1987 102.1 5/31/1987 103 4/30/1987 97.4 3/31/1987 95.8 2/28/1987 91.8 1/31/1987 85.4 12/31/1986 93.2 11/30/1986 89.7 10/31/1986 85.8 9/30/1986 89.7 8/31/1986 91.7 7/31/1986 97.5 6/30/1986 100 5/31/1986 100.2 4/30/1986 100 3/31/1986 95.1 2/28/1986 96 1/31/1986 96.9 12/31/1985 98.2 11/30/1985 98.1 10/31/1985 96.1 9/30/1985 96 8/31/1985 100.9 7/31/1985 103.2 6/30/1985 102.6 5/31/1985 99.6 4/30/1985 104.4 3/31/1985 96.1 2/28/1985 103.1 1/31/1985 102 12/31/1984 97 11/30/1984 105.5 10/31/1984 99.1 9/30/1984 100 8/31/1984 103.1 7/31/1984 100.4 6/30/1984 105.8 5/31/1984 104.8 4/30/1984 106.1 3/31/1984 101.1 2/29/1984 101 1/31/1984 103.9 12/31/1983 103.6 11/30/1983 96.7 10/31/1983 92.1 9/30/1983 91.1 8/31/1983 91.2 7/31/1983 89 6/30/1983 87.5 5/31/1983 87.7 4/30/1983 83.1 3/31/1983 79.4 2/28/1983 67.6 1/31/1983 59 12/31/1982 59.5 11/30/1982 57.4 10/31/1982 54.3 9/30/1982 58.1 8/31/1982 56.9 7/31/1982 63.2 6/30/1982 56.7 5/31/1982 61.4 4/30/1982 57 3/31/1982 56.7 2/28/1982 62.3 1/31/1982 64.9 12/31/1981 66.6 11/30/1981 66.9 10/31/1981 75.6 9/30/1981 77.6 8/31/1981 85.7 7/31/1981 83.5 6/30/1981 83 5/31/1981 86.9 4/30/1981 81.6 3/31/1981 77.8 2/28/1981 69 1/31/1981 74.4 12/31/1980 78.6 11/30/1980 87.2 10/31/1980 84.2 9/30/1980 80.3 8/31/1980 70.8 7/31/1980 65.4 6/30/1980 56.1 5/31/1980 50.1 4/30/1980 60.5 3/31/1980 80.8 2/29/1980 85.3 1/31/1980 85.9 12/31/1979 90.7 11/30/1979 90.2 10/31/1979 92.3 9/30/1979 87.8 8/31/1979 79.4 7/31/1979 81.4 6/30/1979 92.7 5/31/1979 96 4/30/1979 94.6 3/31/1979 96.4 2/28/1979 101.5 1/31/1979 99.5 12/31/1978 102.2 11/30/1978 96.5 10/31/1978 108.6 9/30/1978 106.6 8/31/1978 108 7/31/1978 105.4 6/30/1978 109.5 5/31/1978 105.5 4/30/1978 109.9 3/31/1978 104.7 2/28/1978 107 1/31/1978 107.8 12/31/1977 109.7 11/30/1977 98.9 10/31/1977 95.5 9/30/1977 96.7 8/31/1977 98.7 7/31/1977 97.5 6/30/1977 98.2 4/30/1977 93.1 2/28/1977 97.6 12/31/1976 98.9 10/31/1976 87.1 8/31/1976 94.6 6/30/1976 94.5 4/30/1976 89.5 2/29/1976 101 12/31/1975 93.7 10/31/1975 77.6 8/31/1975 82.4 6/30/1975 72.2 4/30/1975 66.4 2/28/1975 54.5 12/31/1974 43.2 10/31/1974 54.5 8/31/1974 77.3 6/30/1974 92.5 4/30/1974 95.1 2/28/1974 62.7 12/31/1973 70.6 10/31/1973 107.5 8/31/1973 93.8 6/30/1973 104.4 4/30/1973 102.8 2/28/1973 110.8 12/31/1972 116.1 10/31/1972 112 8/31/1972 104.1 6/30/1972 98.9 4/30/1972 95.1 2/29/1972 93.6 12/31/1971 85 10/31/1971 80.3 8/31/1971 82.1 6/30/1971 82.3 4/30/1971 75.2 2/28/1971 77.4 12/31/1970 75.7 10/31/1970 83.2 8/31/1970 91 6/30/1970 88.1 4/30/1970 98 2/28/1970 101.7 12/31/1969 126 10/31/1969 126.8 8/31/1969 131.7 6/30/1969 137.9 4/30/1969 136.6 2/28/1969 138.2 12/31/1968 137.9 10/31/1968 142.3 8/31/1968 131.3 6/30/1968 130.7 4/30/1968 136.6 2/29/1968 137.9 12/31/1967 136.1 10/31/1967 134.5 8/31/1967 130.1 6/30/1967 134 4/30/1967 140.7 2/28/1967 134.3

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
201056.5046.4052.3057.7062.7054.3050.40     
200937.4025.3026.9040.8054.8049.3047.4054.5053.4048.7050.6053.60
200887.3076.4065.9062.8058.1051.0051.9058.5061.4038.8044.7038.60
* The table above displays the monthly average.



Consumer Confidence

According to Wikipedia, consumer confidence is the degree of optimism that consumers feel about the overall state of the economy and their personal financial situation. How confident people feel about stability of their incomes determines their spending activity and therefore serves as one of the key indicators for the overall shape of the economy. In essence, if consumer confidence is higher, consumers are making more purchases, boosting the economic expansion. On the other hand, if confidence is lower, consumers tend to save more than they spend, prompting the contraction of the economy. A month-to-month diminishing trend in consumer confidence suggests that in the current state of the economy most consumers have a negative outlook on their ability to find and retain good jobs.




U.S. Economy Grew a Revised 1.6%
Published: 8/27/2010 11:53:39 AM    By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg 

The U.S. economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the second quarter, less than previously calculated, as companies reined in inventories and the trade deficit widened.

Corporate profits grew last quarter at the slowest rate in a year and employee wages in the prior three months were revised lower.

Today’s GDP report showed consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 2 percent annual rate in the second quarter compared with a previously reported 1.6 percent pace. The revision reflected revised electricity and natural gas usage data, the Commerce Department said.

Purchases increased at a 1.9 percent rate from January through March.

A lack of job growth, declines in household wealth following slumps in stocks and housing, and the drive to reduce debt and boost savings are reasons consumer spending may struggle to strengthen.

Wages and salaries increased by a revised $6.5 billion in the first three months of 2010 from the fourth quarter, compared with $18.8 billion initially reported. The figures incorporate new, more comprehensive data from the Labor Department and show why consumer spending will be hard-pressed to accelerate in coming months.

Figures this week showing a further slide in home sales and a drop in business spending on equipment prompted economists such as Joseph LaVorgna of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. to reduce third-quarter growth estimates.

The trade gap in the second quarter widened to $445 billion, compared with an initial estimate of $425.9 billion, subtracting 3.37 percentage points from growth, the biggest reduction since record-keeping began in 1947, today’s report showed. Imports grew at a 32.4 percent pace, the most since 1984.

Slower inventory accumulation contributed 0.63 percentage points to second-quarter growth. The Commerce Department said in its initial report that stockpiles added 1.05 percentage points to growth after adding 2.64 percentage points in the first three months.

Today’s report also showed gross domestic income, or the money earned by the people, businesses and government agencies whose purchases go into calculating growth, rose at a 2.3 percent annual rate from April through June.

By comparison, GDP expanded 3.6 percent from April through June before adjusting for inflation. According to Fed research, GDI is a better gauge of the economy.

Revisions to first-quarter income showed a gain of 4.1 percent, compared with a 5.6 percent pace initially reported. GDP before adjusting for changes in prices rose at a 4.8 percent pace from January through March.

Corporate profits rose 4.6 percent in the second quarter, the smallest gain since the same three months last year, after a 10.5 percent increase in the first three months of the year, today’s report showed. Earnings were up 39 percent from the same time last year. The increase indicates companies have the wherewithal to boost spending on new equipment and add to payrolls.

Business spending on new equipment and software advanced at a 24.9 percent pace last quarter, the most since 1983, more than the prior estimate of 22 percent. Spending on structures, including office buildings and factories, rose at a 0.4 percent in the second quarter.

The Fed’s preferred price gauge, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, rose at a 1.1 percent annual pace. The reading underscores the Fed’s pledge to keep interest rates near zero in coming months.

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United States Economic News

US Payrolls Fall Less Than Expected in August
Published: 9/3/2010 1:45:22 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Reuters
U.S. employment fell for a third straight month in August, but the decline was far less than expected and private payrolls growth surprised on the upside, easing pressure on the Federal Reserve to prop up growth.

ADP Estimates Companies in U.S. Unexpectedly Cut Jobs
Published: 9/1/2010 12:11:45 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Companies in the U.S. unexpectedly cut workers in August, data from a private report based on payrolls showed. Employment fell by 10,000, according to figures today from ADP Employer Services.

U.S. Economy Grew a Revised 1.6%
Published: 8/27/2010 11:53:39 AM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
The U.S. economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the second quarter, less than previously calculated, as companies reined in inventories and the trade deficit widened.

U.S. Consumer Prices Climb in July
Published: 8/13/2010 10:44:17 AM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
The cost of living in the U.S. climbed in July for the first time in four months, pointing to a stabilization that may ease concern a slowdown in growth will spur deflation.

US Trade Deficit Widens Sharply in June
Published: 8/11/2010 10:28:07 AM By: TradingEconomics.com, Reuters
The trade deficit widened a surprising 18.8 percent in June on a surge of consumer goods from China and other suppliers, suggesting second-quarter economic growth was much weaker than previously thought.

Fed to Buy Treasuries with Maturing Mortgage Debt
Published: 8/10/2010 2:27:28 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Federal Reserve
The US Federal Reserve on Tuesday said it would begin funneling proceeds from its maturing mortgage bonds into longer-term government debt in an effort to support a sputtering economic recovery.

US Economy Sheds 131,000 Jobs in July
Published: 8/6/2010 9:39:11 AM By: TradingEconomics.com, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Total nonfarm payroll employment declined by 131,000 in July, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 9.5 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. Federal government employment fell, as 143,000 temporary workers hired for the decennial census completed their work. Private-sector payroll employment edged up by 71,000.

ADP Estimates Companies in U.S. Added 42,000 Jobs
Published: 8/4/2010 10:19:37 AM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Companies in the U.S. added more workers in July than forecast, data from a private report based on payrolls showed

Flat Consumer Spending Adds to Recovery Worries
Published: 8/3/2010 10:53:06 AM By: Reuters
Consumer spending and incomes were unexpectedly flat in June while personal savings were the highest in a year, implying an anemic economic recovery for the remainder of this year.

US Economic Growth Slows in Second Quarter
Published: 8/2/2010 4:32:15 AM By: TradingEconomics.com
Gross Domestic Product in the United States slowed in the second quarter (April to June) to 2.4% annual rate from 3.7% in the previous quarter.

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