Scarred and scared: post-Covid consumers not their old
selves
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[June 08, 2020] By
Mark John
LONDON (Reuters) - Michael Clark of Amy's
Housewares has one big fear as its London stores prepare to reopen on
June 15 along with other retailers around Britain: "Customers not
spending, having no trust in the economy."
His concern, captured in a survey by the British Independent Retailers
Association (BIRA) before a nationwide easing of social distancing
measures, may be well founded.
Across the world, consumers are emerging from lockdowns warier and more
thrift-conscious than before. That will drag on any recovery and could
encourage governments and central bankers to follow up on coronavirus
handouts with more costly stimulus.
The new thrift is showing up in various ways: some households are
hoarding the cash they saved during lockdowns; some are flocking to
cheaper brands or sticking with essentials.
GRAPHIC: Savings rates in Europe rise Savings rates in Europe rise -
https://graphics.
reuters.com/ECONOMY-EU/SAVINGS/yxmvjkqlnpr/chart.png
Other risks to consumer demand include the outright collapse of
purchasing power among those whose livelihoods were ruined by the
pandemic and even imponderables such as what happens to spending
patterns if more people continue to work from home.
In China, shopping malls began to fill up again from April after
lockdown eased. Online sales have surged in some categories, often
helped by discounts and state coupons.
But a lingering wariness about items deemed non-essential means
consumers may still not emerge as the pillar of growth which Beijing
hopes they will be.
"Consumers are placing a greater focus on essential spending
categories," Fitch Solutions said in a June 4 report, predicting a fall
in Chinese household spending this year and slashing its 2020 growth
forecast to just 1.1% from 5.6% before the pandemic.
DOLLAR STORE CLIENTELE GROWS
In the United States, commonplace brands such as chocolate giant Hershey
or toothpaste-maker Colgate say consumers have traded down. Dollar
stores, meanwhile, expect to open their doors to a new set of customers
as they did after the 2008-09 Great Recession.
"In 2008, folks lost jobs ... and they found us. And I think that's some
of what we're planning for as we take a look into our crystal ball at
back half of the year and 2021," Dollar Tree Chief Executive Gary
Philbin said on May 28.
Much hangs now on what happens to the mountain of savings built up by
those U.S. households which weathered the worst of the lockdown fall-out
and have pushed the overall U.S. savings rate to a record 33% of income.
[to top of second column] |
People wait at a bus stop in Liverpool, following the outbreak of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Liverpool, Britain, June 5,
2020. REUTERS/Molly Darlington/File Photo
GRAPHIC: Savings rates in the U.S. rise -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
ECONOMY-USA/SAVINGS/
|nmovakbjdva/chart.png
While that rate will fall, those who expect cash to flood back into the economy
may be disappointed. A 2012 paper by IMF researchers found that lingering
uncertainty after the onset of the 2008-09 recession boosted saving rates
durably, leading to lower consumption and growth in the wider economy.
Moreover many U.S. households are about to suffer "income cliffs" with one-off
tax rebates expiring in May and pandemic unemployment compensation ending in
July, Oxford Economics said, forecasting lower household income through the rest
of the year.
"This will likely act as a constraint on the consumer spending recovery well
into 2021," it said in a June 3 note.
Such a scenario could force policy makers across the world to encourage savers
to spend by speeding up moves to ease lockdowns, offering more economic support
or pushing interest rates further towards, and even into, negative territory.
The same dilemma exists in Europe. The European Central Bank expects household
savings to rise six points to 19% of income this year and remain high next year
due to what economists call "scarring", when an event leaves a durable impact on
behaviour.
Citing the risk of cash-hoarding, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire has
called for direct incentives to boost demand. The budget he will present next
week will forecast a drop in consumer spending of 10% this year as households
amass savings.
Germany has announced a cut in valued-added tax for the second half of the year
to drive consumption, coupling that with cash handouts to parents.
Presenting hefty downgrades of the bank's eurozone growth protections on
Thursday, ECB President Christine Lagarde said the depth of scarring of domestic
demand was one big factor that will determine the size of the contraction and
recovery to come.
She warned: "Overall, the (ECB) Governing Council sees the balance of risks ...
to the downside."
(Additional reporting by Reuters bureaux; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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