Highlights of the survey results include:
With almost 600,000 Americans losing their jobs in January and unemployment climbing to 7.6 per cent, the RBC Jobs Index saw a drop of nearly 20 points in February to 42.3, compared to 61.8 last month. The February number was the largest single-month decline since the Index was introduced, and the fifth straight month in which this index has hit a new low. Declines in job security follow real experiences in job loss: More than three in five Americans (62 per cent) say they or someone in their close circle have lost their job in the past six months, up from 53 per cent last month.
- Showing the effects of growing anxiety over job losses, the RBC Expectations Index declined to -28.1 in February from -11.3 in January. There is a bright spot: The number of Americans who say that the country is on the right track jumped to 42 per cent in February from the 20s and low 30s, where it had been mired for most of the last year.
- The RBC Current Conditions Index dropped to another all-time low in February and currently stands at 1.6, compared to 8.7 last month. This is the fourth consecutive month in which this index has hit a new all-time low. Consumers are increasingly feeling the effects of the recession, with two in five (39 per cent) saying their personal financial situation is currently weak and two-thirds (67 per cent) saying they now are less comfortable making household purchases than they were six months ago.
- The RBC Investment Index currently stands at 17.6, down from 22.5 in January. This index has also declined to an all-time low for the fourth consecutive month. Two-thirds (66 per cent) of consumers continue to say they are less confident now than they were six months
ago in their ability to make investments for the future, and 70 per cent think it is a bad time to invest in the stock market.
"Consumer confidence and economic recovery are in a chicken-and-the-egg situation. The economy can't begin to recover without people spending and investing. Yet without signs of recovery, consumers and investors will stay on the sidelines," added Harris.