Monday, April 19, 2010

Consumer Confidence, Unemployment Rate and Gasoline Prices

Calculated Risk on consumer confidence:
 Every time I see "consumer confidence", I think employment and gasoline prices ... and here are a couple of graphs to show the relationship:

NOTE: On the following graphs, the unemployment rate and gasoline prices are inverted since they are inversely correlated to confidence.

Consumer Confidence and Unemployment Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows consumer confidence and the unemployment rate (inverted).

There is a strong correlation, although it appears confidence leads the unemployment rate (probably because layoffs stop before the unemployment rate starts falling). Maybe a better graph would be monthly changes in employment vs. confidence (I'll look at that later).

Consumer Confidence and Gasoline PricesThe second graph shows consumer confidence and real gasoline prices (CPI adjusted).

Although there are periods when confidence doesn't track gasoline prices, it does appear there is a relationship.

So my guess is the weak confidence reading tells us what we already know - unemployment is high and gasoline prices are rising.

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