Americans are spending faster than their income is growing

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Data: https://www.bea.gov/news/2026/personal-income-and-outlays-april-2026" target="_blank">Bureau of Economic Analysis; Chart: Axios Visuals

Americans are burning through their financial cushion at an accelerating pace, spending faster than their income is growing, as the energy shock from the https://www.axios.com/world/iran" target="_blank">Iran war slams household budgets.

Why it matters: Consumer spending has indeed held up, defying rock-bottom sentiment readings.

But there's new evidence that suggests households are increasingly drawing down savings to support their spending, a fragile dynamic for the broader economy.


What they're saying: "While prices are rising faster than comfortable, incomes are not, putting consumers in an uncomfortable spot," NerdWallet senior economist Elizabeth Renter wrote.

  • "Rising prices, sluggish income and economic uncertainty could set the stage for a broader pullback in consumer spending and therefore economic growth," Renter added.

By the numbers: The personal saving rate fell to 2.6% in April, down from 3.2% in March and 4.3% in January — a sharp slide that brings it to its lowest level since mid-2022.

  • Consumer spending rose 0.5%, even as disposable personal income fell 0.1%, the Commerce Department said Thursday morning.
  • That gap between how fast consumer incomes are rising and how quickly they are spending is driving the drawdown in the saving rate.
  • Gasoline and energy goods were the single-largest driver of spending increases in April, one sign of how the war's energy impact is registering in household budgets.

Zoom in: The Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, rose 0.4% in April, cooling from 0.7% in March at the height of the energy shock.

  • There is still little evidence of the shock spilling over into non-energy-related categories.

    Core PCE, which excludes food and energy costs, gained 0.2% — cooling slightly from March.

  • Still, compared with the prior year, core PCE ticked up to 3.3%, its highest level since 2023.

    As Fed governor Lisa Cook put it in a https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/cook20260527a.htm" target="_blank">speech Wednesday: "Inflation is clearly moving in the wrong direction."

Between the lines: Before the pandemic, Americans were saving at roughly double today's rate, though that cushion has been eroded by two consecutive inflation shocks in the span of four years.

  • The personal saving rate can send very different messages about the health of the consumer and the broader economy.

    During the 2008 financial crisis, the saving rate climbed above 8% as households retrenched and hoarded cash.

    A high rate in that case was a sign of fear, not necessarily financial health.

  • A low rate can signal the opposite: confidence in future income and a willingness to spend.

    But the makeup of April's spending increase — led by gasoline and energy goods, not discretionary purchases — undercuts that optimistic read.

Data: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis; Chart: Matt Phillips/Axios

The intrigue, via Axios' Matt Phillips: Real per capita disposable income — the money consumers can spend after accounting for taxes and inflation — declined 1.4% in April from a year ago.

It also dropped 0.4% in March.

The bottom line: "Aggregate spending is still being supported by the wealth effect and the upper end of the K-shaped economy, but that support is doing more of the heavy lifting — making the overall spending backdrop look increasingly uneven and fragile," wrote Olu Sonola, Fitch Ratings' head of U.S. economics.

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