Since the last recession ended in 2009, Americans have generally saved about 5% of what they made.
That held up until March, when the savings rate shot up to 13%. Then on Friday morning April’s savings rate was reported, and it had zoomed to 33%.
If that seems strange, Americans saving one-third of their incomes, that’s because it is. Nothing like this has happened before.
Could this be a good thing? More old-fashioned thriftiness when times are hard?
No, it’s not.
One person’s spending is somebody else’s income. Nothing about a savings rate of 33% should be comforting.
The story of the pandemic recession of 2020 is usually told as one of horrific job losses and lost income for business owners. But the other worrisome part of this story is that even people with money may not want to spend it. How long this goes on will largely shape the economic recovery.
It was a terrible week here in the Twin Cities, beginning with the shocking death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. This article is being written with the smell of smoke from burned-out buildings in the air. Given all that, it was hard to look at yet another extraordinary report on the economy in hopes of finding a glimmer of optimism.