Consumer Confidence Index vs Real GDP Growth Rate
Consumer Confidence Index is currently 92.9 (down -5.40). Real GDP Growth Rate is currently 2.4% (down -0.7%).
| Metric | Consumer Confidence Index | Real GDP Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Current value | 92.9 | 2.4% |
| Previous reading | 98.3index | 3.1% |
| Change | -5.40 | -0.7% |
| Trend | down | down |
| Frequency | Monthly | Quarterly |
| Source | The Conference Board | Bureau of Economic Analysis |
| Last updated | 2026-03-25 | 2026-03-27 |
| Category | consumer | growth |
What Consumer Confidence Index measures
The Consumer Confidence Index measures how optimistic or pessimistic consumers are about the economy and their personal financial situation. It is based on a monthly survey of 5,000 U.S. households by The Conference Board.
Consumer confidence has dropped to 92.9 — the lowest in over a year and the fourth consecutive monthly decline. Readings below 100 indicate more pessimism than optimism. For executives, declining confidence is a leading indicator of reduced consumer spending. When consumers feel less confident, they delay major purchases (cars, appliances, vacations), increase savings rates, and become more price-sensitive. Retailers and consumer-facing businesses should prepare for softer demand.
What Real GDP Growth Rate measures
Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the inflation-adjusted value of all goods and services produced in the United States. The growth rate shows how fast the economy is expanding or contracting on an annualized quarterly basis.
GDP growth is the single most important measure of economic health. A rate above 2% signals healthy expansion; below 1% raises recession concerns. For executives, GDP growth directly affects consumer demand, business investment, and hiring plans. The current 2.4% growth rate represents moderate expansion — strong enough to sustain corporate earnings but below the 3%+ pace that typically drives aggressive hiring.
Frequently asked
Consumer Confidence Index is currently 92.9, down -5.40 from the previous reading. Source: The Conference Board, updated monthly.
Real GDP Growth Rate is currently 2.4%, down -0.7% from the previous reading. Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, updated quarterly.
Consumer confidence has dropped to 92.9 — the lowest in over a year and the fourth consecutive monthly decline. Readings below 100 indicate more pessimism than optimism. For executives, declining conf GDP growth is the single most important measure of economic health. A rate above 2% signals healthy expansion; below 1% raises recession concerns. For executives, GDP growth directly affects consumer