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The Quiet Erosion Beneath U.S. Growth

Macro Signposts highlights takeaways from the data analysis conducted by our team of economists and other experts.
The Quiet Erosion Beneath U.S. Growth
The Quiet Erosion Beneath U.S. Growth
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 | {read_time} min read

The U.S. economy appears resilient, judging from key economic measures. AI-driven capex continues to power investment, support equity markets, and sustain a wealth effect that has propped up consumption. Real GDP growth remains positive. Private sector balance sheets are in generally good condition and many higher income and wealthy households have benefited from equity markets gains.

However, fragilities are increasing, especially as U.S. households must now absorb another meaningful hit to their purchasing power, on top various other drags on real income growth. Tariffs, higher energy prices, slowing wage growth, and other factors have driven a sharp drop in real disposable personal income.

Usually, we would expect households to smooth through temporary changes in current income. However, households have been dealing with a series of shocks that have reduced the savings rate to historically low levels and risk denting expectations for future real income growth. Furthermore, AI is a new source of uncertainty for many workers.

This means real consumption growth, at some point, could catch down to real income reality. And if consumption slows, the effect could reverberate through the economy.

Figure 1: U.S. consumption patterns have tended to coincide with real private labor income

Line chart showing year-over-year percent change in real private labor income per worker over time, with shaded areas indicating U.S. recession periods. The data reveals cyclical patterns where income growth typically declines during recessions and recovers afterward. The y-axis displays percent change while the x-axis shows the time series from 1965 - 2025.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (National Income and Product Accounts, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Index) as of April 2026

Other research suggests uncertainty also plays an important role. Specifically, savings and consumption decisions are based not only on expectations of lifetime income, but also on risks. A more risk-averse household might save extra as a buffer against uncertainty. Or as uncertainty rises, they save more – even if their expectations for permanent income haven’t changed.

Figure 2: U.S. real private labor income per worker is declining

Line chart comparing year-over-year percent changes in real private labor income and real consumption over time. The two series track closely together, illustrating the relationship between income growth and consumer spending patterns across economic cycles. The x-axis displays dates while the y-axis shows percentage change values.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) as of April 2026

 

Since the pandemic, U.S. consumption growth has generally outpaced real income growth as greater wealth has coincided with a lower average saving rate. However, looking ahead, we see good reasons why consumption may slow.

First, already historically low household savings rates suggesting household buffers are more limited. The personal saving rate fell to 2.6% of disposable income as of April, according to the BEA. Outside of the period leading up to the global financial crisis and the 2022 energy shock, the saving rate has rarely been this low in data going back to 1960. The only other period of sustained low household savings rate was the 2004-2006 period when housing debt was rapidly increasing.

Greater wealth likely explains at least some of the decline in the savings rate over the last few years, but there are limits to how much further it can fall – particularly since wealth gains are concentrated among higher-income households while the energy and tariff hit falls disproportionately on lower-income consumers with limited resources and the highest marginal propensity to spend.

Second, the income shock is not a single temporary factor, but rather a series of shocks over the past few years that could be permanently altering expectations of future real earnings. Labor market conditions are the primary channel through which households form income expectations. And although we’ve more recently seen encouraging signs that labor market activity is stabilizing or even picking up over the last few years, a growing degree of labor market slack has been evident across indicators. The ratio of job openings to the number of unemployed workers is hovering around 1.0 as of April, according to the BLS – historically the vacancies to unemployment (V/U) ratio doesn’t tend to fall below 1 outside of recessions. The quits rate is below pre-pandemic levels, and consumer surveys of labor market conditions – including the Conference Board’s “jobs plentiful” versus “jobs hard to get” measure – have continued to gradually decline, suggesting workers feel less confident about outside options and labor market conditions more generally. Measures of wage inflation have also gradually declined, especially for lower paying jobs.

Third, relevant polling suggests that the rapid pace of AI technological progress and implementation is increasing uncertainty around the outlook for future incomes.  According to Pew Research, about a third of workers say AI use will lead to fewer job opportunities for them in the long run. A recent yougov.com poll found similar sentiments. More Americans are pessimistic than optimistic about AI's long-term effects, with young adults more likely to worry that AI will replace jobs they depend upon.

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