With the first month of U.S. President Donald Trump's second term in office characterized by threats to impose tariffs on close international allies and the mass firing
of tens of thousands of federal workers—but not the promised lower
grocery prices that Trump repeatedly touted during his campaign—a survey
found consumer confidence plummeted in February to its lowest level since last June.
The
Conference Board, a global nonprofit think tank, reported on Tuesday
the sharpest monthly decline in consumer confidence in four years, with
the index dropping from 105.3 in January to 98.3 this month.
Economists
had projected the index to read 103 in February, but with respondents
telling the Conference Board that they were concerned about inflation
and Trump's tariffs plan, consumer anxiety was higher than experts had
anticipated.
Trump said shortly after taking office that he would
impose tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, only to suspend them
for several weeks. On Monday, the president said at a news conference
that the tariffs would start next month.
The impending policy has set off fears of a trade war and higher costs for U.S. consumers.
Trump's proposal—and his "flip-flopping every couple of days" on imposing the tariffs, said Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), "hurts working-class Americans."
Low consumer sentiment and confidence, said
Jared Bernstein, former chair of the United States Council of Economic
Advisers, "is clearly tied to Trump administration actions, especially
tariffs and the extensive focus on retribution over working families'
living standards."
While references to tariffs in consumers'
responses to the survey were at their highest level since 2019, said
Stephanie Guichard, senior economist for global indicators at the
Conference Board, mentions of "inflation and prices in general continue
to rank high" as well.
Trump focused heavily on the prices of
eggs and other staple groceries during his campaign, but prices have
risen in the last month, partially due to the spread of bird flu among
flocks across the country—a crisis that the Trump administration
reduced its ability to respond to this month when the U.S. Department of
Agriculture accidentally fired several employees who had been working on the outbreaks.
NPR noted in a memo that a survey out of University of Michigan this week also showed that consumer sentiment dropped 10% this month from January.
Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at financial markets research firm FWDBONDS, told Al Jazeera
that the mass firing of roughly 30,000 federal workers has also led to
growing anxiety among consumers about labor markets, a potential coming
recession, and the health of the economy.
"Americans are increasingly pessimistic about the outlook," Rupkey told
the outlet. "No federal government has ever before threatened
government workers with mass firings and it is starting to scare the
daylights out of consumers."