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U.S. consumer sentiment rises on optimism over job market

Chuck Burton/Associated Press<br><br>A new report shows consumer sentiment is at its second-highest level since 2007. Economists say the index shows consumers, such as Lucy Perez, of Charlotte, N.C., are optimistic because of improving incomes and job prospects.

WASHINGTON – Optimism about the job market lifted U.S. consumer sentiment in April to its second-highest level since 2007.

The University of Michigan’s sentiment index rose to 95.9 from 93 in March. Only January’s reading of 98.1 has been higher since 2007, the year the Great Recession began. Over the past five months, sentiment has been, on average, at its highest level since 2004.

Richard Curtin, chief economist of the Michigan survey, attributed the April increase to optimism over consistently low inflation and low interest rates and improving prospects for jobs and incomes.

Curtin said consumers expect interest rates to rise from current historically low levels but only modestly. And they expect any economic damage from higher rates to be offset by the benefits of more jobs and incomes.

Last month, a separate measure of consumer attitudes – the Conference Board’s confidence index – told a different story: That index fell to 95.2 from 101.4 in March, the business group said this week.

The Conference Board blamed a lackluster jobs report in March for the drop. The American economy added just 126,000 jobs in March, breaking a 12-month streak of at least 200,000 new jobs a month. Thirty-one states registered job losses in March.

Still, since March 2014, the economy has produced a healthy 3.1 million job gains. The government said Wednesday that the U.S. economy grew at an annual rate of just 0.2 percent from January through March. But economists expect growth to strengthen in the spring.



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