WASHINGTON — Consumer borrowing surged again in April, helped by the largest gain in credit card borrowing in a year.
Consumer borrowing expanded by $20.5 billion in April, the Federal Reserve reported Friday. That was down only slightly from a gain of $21.3 billion in March, which was the biggest increase in eight months. The strong gains pushed consumer credit to a fresh record of $3.38 trillion.
Borrowing in the category that includes credit cards jumped by $8.6 billion, the largest rise in 12 months. Borrowing in the category that covers auto and student loans advanced a solid $11.9 billion, after an even bigger $16.5 billion increase in March.
Economists expect that consumers, who have seen strong job gains in the past year, will keep borrowing and spending in coming months, helping to boost overall economic growth.
The Fed’s monthly consumer credit report does not cover mortgages or any other loans secured by real estate such as home-equity loans.



