By
the end of October, the median low-income family spent 64% of
the extra cash they accumulated this year compared with last
year, leaving them with about $236 in extra cash, according to a
report released Wednesday by the JPMorgan Chase Institute. In
contrast, higher-income households lost just 38% of the cash
cushion built up this year, and had a median $810 in savings,
the study found.
"If these trends continue, we would expect low-income families
to deplete their account balance gains sooner than their
high-earning counterparts," researchers noted in the report.
(GRAPHIC: Cash piles shrinking - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/rlgpdqoabvo/chart.png)
The JPMorgan Chase study showed that cash balances appeared
steady on average after rising earlier this year, in line with a
separate report released by the Federal Reserve last week
showing that balances in cash, checking accounts and savings
deposits rose over the three months ending in September to a
record $13.4 trillion.
But a look at cash balances for the median household - which is
not affected as much by households with abnormally high, or
unusually low, account balances - showed a more volatile
experience.
The median cash balance for checking account holders studied by
JPMorgan Chase rose in the spring when the government
distributed cash payments to most households - and balances have
been declining since.
Those households could experience another substantial drop in
income and spending at the end of the year when unemployment
benefits are set to expire for millions of workers participating
in pandemic programs created by the CARES Act, the researchers
said.
Consumers have previously cut spending on non-durable goods by
12% after losing unemployment benefits, and those receiving
jobless benefits reduced spending by 14% over the summer after a
$600 weekly supplement to unemployment benefits expired at the
end of July, the study noted.
Lawmakers have yet to reach an agreement on another round of
aid. Some COVID-19 relief measures could be attached to a
critical spending measure that must be passed by Friday to avoid
a federal government shutdown.
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte in New York; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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