Hispanics’ Consumer Confidence Improves as Optimism Grows
Overall, 62 percent of Hispanics indicated they are financially better off today than a year ago, up nearly six points from the second quarter of 2018 (56.2 percent). Looking ahead, 72.4 percent of Hispanics indicated they will be better off over the next year, up slightly from 71.6 percent in the second quarter.
Consumer confidence among Hispanics in the U.S. improved in the third quarter of 2018 as optimism has grown about their financial situation as well as the U.S. economy as a whole, according to a new national consumer sentiment index conducted by the () in FAU’s .
The Hispanic Consumer Sentiment Index (HCSI), taken from July through September, stands at 93.7, up more than seven points from the second quarter of 2018 when the Index stood at 86.4. However, the index continues to trail the quarterly score of 98.1 for the overall U.S. population as published in September by the .
Overall, 62 percent of Hispanics indicated they are financially better off today than a year ago, up nearly six points from the second quarter of 2018 (56.2 percent). Looking ahead, 72.4 percent of Hispanics indicated they will be better off over the next year, up slightly from 71.6 percent in the second quarter. Hispanics’ short-run economic outlook improved, with 59.5 percent saying they expect the country as a whole to experience good business conditions in the upcoming year, which is a 10-point improvement from the previous quarter.
The long-run outlook also improved, with 57.6 percent of Hispanics expecting good times for the country as a whole over the next five years, up slightly from the second quarter (56.2 percent). Overall, 58.2 percent of Hispanics think it is good time to buy big-ticket items for the home, up from 51.7 percent in the second quarter.
It appears the positive economic conditions of this quarter have also improved President Trump’s approval rating among Hispanics, which went up from 33 to 37 percent in the third quarter of 2018, back to where it was in the first quarter of the year. Of those surveyed, 20.4 percent identified themselves as Republicans, 37.7 percent Democrats, 17.5 percent Independents and 24.4 percent were not registered.
“The improvement in Hispanics’ optimism about their economic future is good news for business, considering that the Latino community is the largest minority group in the United States with a purchasing power of $1.7 trillion,” said , Ph.D., director of ֱBEPI. “When there is more is optimism, there is more motivation to go shopping.”
The survey was conducted nationally from July 1 to September 30. The random polling sample consisted of 750 Hispanics, 18 years of age and older, with a margin of error of +/- 4.1 percent. The survey was administered using both landlines via IVR data collection and online data collection using . Responses for the entire sample were weighted to reflect the national distribution of the Hispanic population by region, education, gender and age according to latest American Community Survey data.
For more information, polling results and full cross-tabulations, visit or contact , Ph.D. at mescaler@fau.edu
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