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Lower gasoline prices spur smaller-than-expected decline in December retail sales

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Lower gasoline prices spur smaller-than-expected decline in December retail sales <br> <br> By JEANNINE AVERSA<br> The Associated Press<br> 1/15/02 8:46 AM<br> <br> <br> WASHINGTON (AP) -- Retail sales edged down by a smaller-than-expected 0.1 percent in December as consumers showed resilience in the face of the recession and rising unemployment. <br> <br> The tiny decline reported by the Commerce Department Tuesday mainly stemmed from a 4.2 percent drop in sales at gasoline stations, reflecting lower prices at the pump. <br> <br> While sales of sporting goods and building supplies declined, many other categories, including home furnishings, electronics and appliances, and clothing, saw sales post solid gains in December. <br> <br> Sales of cars inched down by a tiny 0.1 percent, following a steep 10.3 percent drop in November, as free-financing deals and other incentives waned. <br> <br> To revive the economy, which fell into recession in March, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates 11 times last year. That pushed the prime rate, a benchmark for many consumer and business loans, to the lowest level since November 1965. <br> <br> Some analysts are predicting those rate reductions will set the stage for a recovery in the first half of this year. <br> <br> But whether that timetable is accurate depends in part on whether consumers -- whose spending accounts for two-thirds of all economic activity -- reduce spending in the coming months. <br> <br> The nation&#39;s unemployment rate hit a six-year high of 5.8 percent in December and many economists say the jobless rate will continue to climb, peaking out at around 6.5 percent in the summer. <br> <br> Economists are concerned that a worsening jobs picture could jolt Americans&#39; confidence, causing consumers to sharply pull back spending, which could delay a rebound or make for a weak recovery. <br> <br> Consumers have shown resilience in the face of the economic slump, the Sept. 11 terror attacks and rising unemployment. And, despite the rise in December&#39;s jobless rate, consumer confidence last month jumped sharply after three months of big declines. <br> <br> For all of 2001, retail sales rose by 3.4 percent. While that was a big moderation from the 7.6 percent increase in 2000, it showed that consumer spending didn&#39;t collapse. Still, the 3.4 percent increase was the weakest showing since the government began tracking retail sales using the current classification system in 1993. <br> <br> Tuesday&#39;s report showed that sales at clothing stores rose by 2.6 percent in December as stores heavily discounted merchandise to lure shoppers. In November, such sales fell by 1.2 percent. <br> <br> Sales of electronics and appliances rose by 2 percent, following a 4.1 percent increase. Sales at bars and restaurants rose by 1.8 percent, up from a 1 percent increase in November. <br> <br> At general merchandise stores, including department stores, sales grew by 0.5 percent, after a slim 0.1 percent rise. Sales at health and beauty stores rose by 0.4 percent, following a 0.5 percent decline. <br> <br> Sales at sporting goods stores and hobby shops declined by 3.3 percent in December, after a 3.7 percent advance. Sales of building and garden supplies fell by 1.9 percent, after a 0.4 percent decrease. <br> <br> The 0.1 percent drop in overall retail sales in December came after a revised 3 percent decline, a smaller decrease than the government previously reported. Many economists were expecting a 1.4 percent decline in sales in December. <br> <br> Excluding sales at gasoline stations, overall retail sales rose 0.2 percent in December. <br> <br> Last week, December sales figures released by the nation&#39;s largest retailers showed that discount and moderately priced chains, such as Wal-Mart, achieved better-than-expected gains. <br> <br> A surge of last-minute shopping saved retailers from a disastrous holiday performance, but the heavy discounting that fueled it was expected to hurt fourth-quarter profits. <br> <br> <br> <br>
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