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WASHINGTON – Americans increased their borrowing in November, led by continued gains in auto and student loans.
The
Federal Reserve said consumers increased their borrowing by $12.3
billion in November to a seasonally adjusted $3.09 trillion. That is a
record level and follows an October increase of $17.9 billion.
Almost
all of the November increase came from an $11.9 billion rise in
borrowing for auto loans and student loans. Borrowing in the category
that covers credit cards ticked up only $457.8 million after surging in
October.
Credit card borrowing plunged after the
Great Recession and consumers remain cautious about taking on
high-interest debt. It has gradually increased to its highest level in
more than three years, but it's still 16 percent below its peak of more
than $1 trillion reached in 2008.
The combination of weak hiring and meager wage gains has left many Americans reluctant to charge their purchases.
Through
November, the measure of auto loans and student loans has risen 8.2
percent from a year ago and has increased in every month but one since
May 2010. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York quarterly report on
consumer credit shows student loan debt has been the biggest driver of
borrowing since the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009.
But
consumers are starting to open their wallets, even if they have
resisted using credit cards. Auto sales ended the year strongly, while
other purchases have picked up.
Consumer spending
rose 0.5 percent in November, the biggest increase in five months,
according to the Commerce Department. That solid showing suggests solid
economic growth in the final three months of 2013.
The
Fed's borrowing report tracks credit card debt, auto loans and student
loans but not mortgages, home equity loans and other loans.
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