Absolutely! They even made another jump at some stores (Banana Republic, Ann Taylor) between last summer and this summer. I was physically smaller last summer and wore a larger size than I current wear at Banana Republic.
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Have manufacturers changed sizing to make us psychologically feel better about our sizes?
Maybe, but I suspect it's because the "average" absolute size of American women and teens has been creeping upwards. If a store routinely stocks sizes 2-16 or maybe 18, and an ever increasing portion of the population is outgrowing those sizes, they are losing a huge portion of the market. Most women are loathe to make the switch from shopping at "regular" stores to plus sized stores. The solution for the manufacturers is to resize the clothing the keep more people in their stores. I know when I was approaching the boundary of outgrowing misses sizes, I would buy anything rather than go into a Lane Bryant store or the plus sized department. This solves that problem for a lot of women.
At the other end of the spectrum, although most of us can't really empathize, it does cause problems for truly small women. My dd now wears a 0 or 00. She is nowhere near anorexic, but at 24 is very athletic at has very narrow hips. She has a hard time trying to buy professional looking clothing. Another friend who is 5" tall and 100 pounds of solid muscle, has to buy her nurses scrubs, then take them apart and resew them small enough so they don't fall off.
Mel