Decline follows year of slow progress within three-county area
MURFREESBORO — With
the holiday season in full swing, Midstate consumers have a gloomier economic
outlook compared with their views earlier this fall, according to the latest
three-county survey by MTSU.
Though consumers’ perceptions of the economy improved during
2013, the latest Middle Tennessee Consumer Outlook Index shows the overall index
falling sharply to 122 this month from 199 in September.
The results from MTSU’s Office of Consumer Research mirror
the national downward trend of consumer confidence reported by the Conference
Board, a New York-based private research firm, said Tim Graeff, director of the
Office of Consumer Research in MTSU’s Jones College of Business.
“Local consumers view the current U.S. economy a bit more
negatively than they did in September, and local consumers are adopting a more
pessimistic view of the future of the economy,” Graeff said.
“A decrease in consumer outlook such as this is definitely
not welcome news for local businesses and retailers as we head into the
ever-important Christmas and Holiday shopping season.”
For some businesses, sales generated in the last two months
of the year can be as much as 40 percent of their total annual sales.
“Whether or not this general negative view of the economy
finds its way into local consumers’ shopping plans for this Christmas and
holiday season remains to be seen,” Graeff said.
The current poll of 302 randomly selected adult residents of
Davidson, Rutherford and Williamson counties was conducted Dec. 4 and 6. The
Office of Consumer Research computes the index by adding the percentage of
favorable responses to each of a series of questions and subtracting the
percentage of negative responses.
The latest dip reverses a trend of gradual increase in the
index, which showed a score of 106 in November 2012, 144 in February and 193 in
April.
The December 2013 survey showed a number of factors weighing
on consumers’ minds as they make shopping and spending plans for the rest of
the year. These include:
- Concerns about the
stability of the U.S. economy.
- Worries about long-term
fixes to solving the U.S. debt problem and extending the debt ceiling.
- Frustrations with the new
health care law and concerns about its possible negative effect on the
economy.
- Gridlock in Congress.
- Concerns about the future
of the job market.
- Continued worries about a
slow economic recovery.
Local consumers were also asked about the recent Affordable
Care Act, also known as Obamacare, and its possible effect on the overall
economy. A majority of local consumers said they expect the ACA to have a
negative effect on the overall U.S. economy.
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