Back-to-school spending to set record on pricier supplies - report

14 July 2022 - 10:00 By Reuters
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Spending is expected to jump 5.8% to $34.4bn (R586.72bn) this year, Deloitte said on Thursday, citing an online survey of 1,200 parents of school-aged children. File picture.
Spending is expected to jump 5.8% to $34.4bn (R586.72bn) this year, Deloitte said on Thursday, citing an online survey of 1,200 parents of school-aged children. File picture.
Image: Franco Megannon

Retailers are set for the strongest back-to-school shopping season on record as inflation drives up prices of clothes and supplies and more students return to physical classrooms after two years of pandemic disruption, a Deloitte forecast showed.

Spending is expected to jump 5.8% to $34.4bn (R586.72bn) this year, Deloitte said on Thursday, citing an online survey of 1,200 parents of school-aged children.

The strong forecast is a positive sign for the retail industry whose prospects have taken a hit from a drop in American spending power due to soaring gas and food prices.

While one in three households say they are in a worse financial position than last year, according to the survey, average spending per student is still expected to rise 8% to $661. The figure represents a 27% rise from pre-pandemic levels.

"People are leaning into their savings. We are also seeing people reaching for credit ... and so they are making it happen," Stephen Rogers, managing director at Deloitte's Consumer Industry Center, said in an interview.

Data from Mastercard SpendingPulse last month also pointed to strong back-to-school retail sales with projected growth of 7.5%. Mastercard predicted department stores would be the big winners this season thanks to a rebound in store traffic.

Deloitte said in-store shopping would account for nearly half of all spending in what is typically the second-biggest shopping event after the holiday season, with online shopping set for a slowdown following rapid growth over the pandemic.

The shopping season is also expected to occur earlier than usual, Deloitte added, as customers rush to snap up products on fears that supply chain disruptions could limit stocks.

"[Retailers] certainly have much more on the shelves than they did last year this time," said Deloitte Insights Leader Rod Sides. 


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