KEY POINTS
  • U.S. consumer spending rose steadily in December, according to the Commerce Department. 
  • Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, increased 0.3% last month as households spent more on health care.
  • The economy is likely on a slower growth path this year due to tepid income gains and slumping business investment. 
Customers look on as a Walmart cashier rings up their purchases at a Walmart store in Richmond, California.

U.S. consumer spending rose steadily in December, but tepid income gains pointed to moderate consumption growth this year, which together with slumping business investment likely set the economy on a slower growth path this year.

While the report on Friday from the Commerce Department also showed monthly inflation picking up last month, price pressures remained muted. The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday and could keep monetary policy on hold at least through 2020.