Economy

Politics Dictates U.S. Consumer Sentiment

As families across the United States sit down for Thanksgiving dinner today, many will be hoping to avoid talking about politics. Nothing quite divides the nation nowadays like political partisanship does, and as figures from the University of Michigan show, its influence reaches deeper than you'd perhaps think.

As illustrated by this infographic, a sharp, meaningful shift in consumer sentiment occurred around the time of Trump's election as President in 2016/2017. Democrats went from an index score of 102.1 in the month before the election, to 77.5 after the 45th President had taken office. While the 2020/21 shift in power to the blue side of the aisle coincided with the turbulence of the Covid-19 pandemic, a clear shift upwards for Demorats can be observed in 2020 and 2021 - peaking just after Biden entered the White House.

Republican consumers' sentiment on the other hand carried on nosediving throughout the pandemic and election year. A trend that has only continued since Biden was sworn in. The latest index figures for November have Democrats at 88.4, higher than at any point during the Trump administration, while the Republican figure is a mere 37.8.

Description

This chart shows the monthly U.S. consumer sentiment index, by political party support from 2016 to 2021.

Download Chart
NBA all-time scoring list 1946-2024
U.S. monthly inflation rate 2024
Coronavirus (COVID-19) cases in Italy as of October 2024, by region
Number of civilian casualties during the war in Ukraine 2022-2024
U.S. real GDP growth by quarter Q2 2013- Q2 2024
MLB: World Series titles won by team 1903-2024

Any more questions?

Get in touch with us quickly and easily.
We are happy to help!

Do you still have questions?

Feel free to contact us anytime using our contact form or visit our FAQ page.

Statista Content & Design

Need infographics, animated videos, presentations, data research or social media charts?

More Information