Does presidential politics depress California consumer confidence?

”Survey says” looks at various rankings and scorecards judging geographic locations, while noting these grades are best seen as a mix of artful interpretation and data.

Buzz: California’s consumer confidence about the future often falls into a funk in presidential election years.

Source: My trusty spreadsheet looked at the poll-powered results of the Conference Board’s index of statewide optimism, a benchmark that dates to 2007. To gauge political influences, the index average of the first five months of election years – 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024 – was compared with the 13 years when control of the White House is not up for grabs.

Topline

Presidential politics often makes people grumpy – no matter your candidate or their chances of victory.

This California index confirms that thesis. Election year confidence, by this math, ran on average 7% lower than the non-election periods.

Details

This yardstick of shopper psyche comprises two factors – one eyeing today’s financial picture, the other tracking economic hopes. There’s a wide gap in the sub-index performance in these politically charged years.

The California view of current conditions was only 2% worse in election years than other times.

Conversely, their expectations for the future were 11% lower when the White House was up for a vote.

Economically speaking, nerve-wracking national politics chill the view of the future – and that anxiety can cut the urge to spend.

Caveat

Could 2024 be an outlier?

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