US consumer sentiment slumps for third month in a row amid tariff chaos

Consumer sentiment slid another 10.5 per cent this month, “with declines seen consistently across all groups by age, education, income, wealth, political affiliations, and geographic regions,” said the University of Michigan’s latest survey, posting a reading of 57.9.

The latest figure is 27.1 percent lower than that of March last year, Xinhua news agency reported.

“While current economic conditions were little changed, expectations for the future deteriorated across multiple facets of the economy, including personal finances, labour markets, inflation, business conditions, and stock markets,” the survey said.

“Many consumers cited the high level of uncertainty around policy and other economic factors; frequent gyrations in economic policies make it very difficult for consumers to plan for the future,” it continued.

Year-ahead inflation expectations jumped up from 4.3 per cent last month to 4.9 per cent this month, the highest reading since November 2022 and marking three consecutive months of “unusually large” increases of 0.5 percentage points or more, the survey noted.

Long-run inflation expectations surged from 3.5 per cent in February to 3.9 per cent in March. This is the largest month-over-month increase seen since 1993, it added.

“Many consumers pointed to the significant uncertainty surrounding policies and other economic factors,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the survey. She added that the constant shifts in economic policies make it challenging for consumers to plan for the future, no matter their political views.

“Consumers across all political affiliations agree that the outlook has deteriorated since February,” she mentioned.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has imposed a series of tariffs on a broad array of goods from major trade partners such as Canada, China, and the European Union, prompting retaliatory duties from these countries. Some tariffs were initially introduced and later suspended for a month.

On March 13, Trump threatened to impose a 200 per cent tariff on European imports, including wine, cognac, and other alcoholic beverages. (IANS)

Latest News

TRAIL of threats Sharp rise in AI-led cyber crime; to hog limelight at India-AI Impact Summit 2026

Sukumar Sah NEW DELHI: Even as the who’s who of...

Nothing artificial about this affection

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: If geopolitics in the 20th century...

No ringing this barbell of heavy top & bottom Vanishing mid level of white-collar jobs portends a bleak future for middle class

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: India’s white-collar slowdown is no longer...

RBI cracks down on mis-selling Issues guidelines on ads, sales by banks

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)...

Topics

spot_img