Consumer Confidence 2009: Worst Year on Record
Just 8 Percent of
Americans Rate the Economy Positively
Analysis
by Peyton M. Craighill
Dec. 29, 2009
Consumer
confidence plowed through its worst year in 24 years of weekly polls, weighted down
by abysmal ratings of the national economy.
(/ABC News)
This
week's ABC News Consumer Comfort Index stands at -44 on its scale of +100 to
-100, halting three weeks of positive momentum when it matched its yearly high
last week at -42.
Click here for PDF
with charts and data table.
The
CCI has averaged -48 this year, 6 points lower than last year when the economy
plunged into the worst recession in a generation and 4 points lower than its
previous year-long low, -44 in 1992. In comparison, the CCI has averaged -12 in
weekly polls since late 1985.
INDEX
The index is based on ratings of the national economy, the buying climate and
personal finances. Ratings of the economy, at just 8 percent positive, are the
worst of the three measures by far. This week they match their 2009 average and
are 30 points below their long-term average.
Forty-seven
percent say their own finances are in good shape, 2 points better than its 2009
averaged but 10 points worse than its long-term average.
Ratings
of the buying climate which were on a nine week stretch of improvement
halted this week at 29 percent positive. It finishes the year 4 points better
than its year-long average but 8 points worse than its long-term average.
TREND
This week, the index continued its pattern of slight progress then stalling,
underscoring the fickle nature of consumer sentiment. The best ratings the CCI
could muster in 2009 was -42 last week and also in May. The worst was -54 in
January, matching the lowest measure ever.
The
CCI has been below -40 for a record 88 consecutive weeks and hasn't seen
positive territory since March 2007.
GROUPS
The index, as usual, is higher among better-off Americans, but has been negative
across the board for 44 weeks straight, the longest such run in data since
1990.
It's
-8 among those with the highest incomes but -68 among those with the lowest,
-34 among people who've attended college vs. -55 among high school dropouts,
-31 among men while -54 among women, -40 among homeowners while -49 among
renters and -40 among whites vs. -57 among blacks.
Partisan
differences remain, but they're much attenuated. The CCI's -40 among
Republicans, compared with -50 among Democrats and -37 among independents. That
10-point Democratic-Republican gap compares with a 17-point gap in 2009, 41
points last year and 32 points long-term.
Here's
a closer look at the three components of the ABC News CCI:
NATIONAL
ECONOMY Eight percent of Americans rate the economy as excellent or good; it
was 7 percent last week. The highest was 80 percent Jan. 16, 2000. The worst
was 4 percent Feb. 8, 2009.
PERSONAL
FINANCES Forty-seven percent say their own finances are excellent or good; it
was 50 percent last week. The best was 70 percent, last reached in January
2000. The worst was 39 percent June 28 and 21, 2009.
BUYING
CLIMATE Twenty-nine percent say it's an excellent or good time to buy things;
it was 30 percent last week. The best was 57 percent on Jan. 16, 2000. The
worst was 18 percent, last reached Oct. 19, 2008.
METHODOLOGY
Interviews for the ABC News Consumer Comfort Index are reported in a
four-week rolling average. This week's results are based on telephone
interviews among a random national sample of 1,000 adults in the four weeks
ending Dec. 27, 2009. The results have a 3-point error margin. Field work by ICR-International Communications Research of Media,
Pa.
The
index is derived by subtracting the negative response to each index question
from the positive response to that question. The three resulting numbers are
added and divided by three. The index can range from +100 (everyone positive on
all three measures) to -100 (all negative on all three measures). The survey
began in December 1985.