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In this March 5, 2012 photo, consumer credit cards are posed in North Andover, Mass. Consumer borrowing rose by $17.8 billion in January, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday, March 7, 2012. That followed similar gains in December and November. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
In this March 5, 2012 photo, consumer credit cards are posed in North Andover, Mass. Consumer borrowing rose by $17.8 billion in January, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday, March 7, 2012. That followed similar gains in December and November. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
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WASHINGTON —
Americans took out more loans to buy cars and attend school in February but used their credit cards less frequently for the second straight month.

The Federal Reserve said Friday that consumers increased borrowing by $8.7 billion, the sixth straight monthly increase.

The jump in borrowing was driven by an $11 billion increase in the category that mostly measures demand for auto and student loans. Borrowing on credit cards fell by $2 billion after a $3 billion decline in January.

Total consumer borrowing rose to a seasonally adjusted $2.52 trillion. That’s nearly at pre-recession levels and up from a post-recession low of $2.39 trillion in September 2010. Borrowing had tumbled for more than two years during and immediately after the recession.

Consumer borrowing rose by $18.6 billion in January, following similar gains in December and November. The gains for those three months were the largest in a decade.

A rise in borrowing could suggest consumers are feeling more confident about the economy. However, few are comfortable enough to step up credit-card use. Consumers carried $799 billion in credit-card debt in February — 15 percent less than they held in December 2007, the first month of the Great Recession. And student-loan debt surpassed the $1 trillion mark for the first time at the end of last year.

Steven Wood, chief economist at Insight Economics, said February’s borrowing increase was strong. But he noted that it was the smallest increase since October.

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