Washington,
DC, Dec. 13—Retail sales dropped a record 3.7% in November as consumers,
buffeted by huge job losses, terrorist attacks and a recession, got the holiday
sales season off to a disappointing start.
According to the Commerce Department, the record drop in retail sales followed a
6.4% upward surge in October, also a record. That big increase was caused by a
huge jump in auto sales as Americans responded to the free financing offers that
dealers used to get shoppers back into showrooms following the September 11
terrorist attacks.
The Labor Department also reported that the number of Americans filing first
time claims for unemployment benefits fell by 86,000 last week—the biggest
decline in weekly jobless claims in nine years—providing reason to hope that
the huge wave of layoffs that occurred following the terrorist attacks may be
slackening. The big decline left total new claims at 394,000 last week.
The country's first recession in a decade is keeping a lid on inflation. A third
report showed that wholesale prices fell for a second consecutive month,
dropping 0.6% in November after a bigger 1.6% drop in October.
The November decline was led by another big drop in energy prices, which offset
rising prices for autos and tobacco. Outside of food and energy, the core rate
of wholesale inflation was up 0.2% in November after having dropped 0.5% in
October.
The retail sales report showed that auto sales, which had surged 24.2% in
October, fell 11.9% in November. Even without the wide swing in auto sales,
retail sales would have been weak last month, dropping by 0.5% following a 0.8%
rise outside of autos in September.
There is concern that the nearly 800,000 job layoffs that have occurred in the
past two months will trigger sharp cuts in spending and make the current
downturn deeper and more severe than the mild recession most economists are now
forecasting.
The government had reported last week that unemployment rose to 5.7% in
November—a six year high—as a wide swath of industries, led by travel
related businesses such as airlines and hotels, laid off an additional 331,000
workers last month.
The National Bureau of Economic Research reported recently that the country's
record long economic expansion had ended in March and the first recession since
the 1990-91 downturn had begun.
Many economists predict the current recession will be relatively mild and end by
sometime next spring. However, forecasters readily admit that their economic
models have no way of accounting for the unprecedented situation: a recession
combined with the worst terrorist attacks in U.S. history, a war being waged in
Afghanistan and anthrax letters turning up in the mail.
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates Tuesday for the 11th time this year,
pushing rates to the lowest level in 40 years. Economists are hoping this
aggressive credit easing and a stimulus bill that has yet to make it through
Congress will provide the necessary fuel to power an economic recovery next
year.
The retail sales report showed that sales, after adjusting for seasonal
variations, totaled $293.6 billion last month.
In addition to the big slump in auto sales, general merchandise stores reported
a drop of 0.1% in November sales.
Last week, the country's biggest retail chains had reported that their November
sales had gotten the holiday season off to a lackluster start.
Sales at gasoline stations were down a big 6.3%, a drop that largely reflected
falling gasoline prices. Sales at hardware stores were off 0.2% but sales at
furniture dealers showed a strong 2.6% increase.
Copyright
2001 Floor Focus Inc