Economic Outlook: The Real Story Behind Consumer Spending in 2025

The Disconnect: When Good Numbers Don't Tell the Whole Story
Despite strong economic indicators—robust job growth, stable inflation, and solid consumer confidence metrics—there's a noticeable shift in consumer spending behavior. People are becoming more cautious with discretionary purchases, even when traditional economic data suggests they should feel confident about spending.
Why the Tariff Uncertainty Narrative Doesn't Hold Up
The conventional explanation points to tariff uncertainty driving consumer caution. However, this explanation has a fundamental flaw: if people genuinely believed tariffs would significantly increase prices in the coming months, rational economic behavior would be to accelerate purchases now, not delay them.
The data shows mixed signals that support this skepticism:
- Car sales surged as people rushed to buy before potential price increases
- Some consumers engaged in pre-emptive buying of appliances and electronics
- Yet overall discretionary spending continued declining
This suggests tariff uncertainty isn't the primary driver of spending restraint.
The Real Structural Issues
1. The Housing Market Lock-In Effect
A massive portion of homeowners are trapped by interest rate differentials:
- 58% of Fannie Mae single-family loans carry rates below 4%
- Current mortgage rates hover above 6%
- Homeowners save an average of $511 monthly by keeping their low-rate mortgages
The Math is Simple: Why would someone with a 2.5% mortgage rate sell to buy at 6.5%+? This creates artificial scarcity in housing inventory and keeps people in homes that may no longer fit their needs.
2. The Credit Card Debt Spiral
The more insidious problem is the gradual erosion of disposable income:
The Pattern: Many families began using credit cards strategically for groceries and essentials to earn cash-back rewards, typically paying off balances monthly. However, persistent food and housing inflation has outpaced income growth, gradually reducing their ability to pay off these balances in full.
The Trap: What started as smart financial behavior (earning rewards on necessities) has become a debt service burden that further reduces disposable income. With average credit card rates now above 20%, this creates a vicious cycle.
The Numbers:
- Average credit card debt among those with balances: $7,321 (up 5.8% year-over-year)
- Average family of four grocery spending: $1,327 monthly
- 46% of cardholders carried a balance at some point in the past year
Economic Outlook: Next 12-24 Months
Expected Trends
Consumer Spending: Continued weakness in discretionary spending that gradually broadens as more households hit credit limits. Essential spending will hold up, but restaurants, travel, and retail will struggle.
Credit Markets: Early stages of a consumer credit crisis unfolding over 2025-2026. Delinquency rates may climb from current ~8.7% to 10-12%, triggering tighter lending standards.
Housing Market: Rate cuts will have a more significant impact than initially expected. Each 1% drop in rates makes a new group of buyers eligible for loans based on debt-to-income calculations, creating substantial pent-up demand despite supply constraints.
GDP Growth: Expect 2.5-4% growth—more resilient than structural headwinds might suggest, particularly due to housing market responsiveness to rate cuts.
Key Dynamics
No Recession Expected: While growth may be below optimal, the structural issues described create constraints rather than collapse. The economy shows remarkable resilience with significant support mechanisms still in place.
Sectoral Divergence: Essential goods/services will hold steady while discretionary sectors face headwinds. Home improvement and renovation will boom as people invest in homes they can't afford to leave.
Policy Limitations: Traditional monetary policy tools are less effective for these structural issues. Rate cuts won't solve housing lock-in effects or suddenly restore disposable income, though they will help housing demand.
The Bottom Line
The economic data tells a story of persistent but manageable weakness rather than impending crisis. The real challenge isn't temporary policy uncertainty but structural adjustments to a new reality of higher baseline rates, elevated housing costs, and constrained household finances.
Understanding these underlying dynamics—rather than relying on headline indicators or conventional narratives—provides a clearer picture of where the economy is headed. We're not facing a typical cyclical downturn that rate cuts can easily fix, but rather a period of adjustment to new structural constraints that will define economic performance for the next several years.
Key Takeaway: The disconnect between positive economic indicators and cautious consumer behavior reflects real structural constraints on household finances, not temporary sentiment issues. This suggests a period of below-optimal but stable growth as the economy adjusts to these new realities.