Shoppers are likely to spend $31.30 billion, or about $586 per
student, in kindergarten to 12th grade, Deloitte said, citing
its shopper surveys. That compares to $31.90 billion, or $597
per head, for 2023, it said.
WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
Parents typically look for large discounts on sneakers,
computers, clothing and backpacks ahead of the new school year.
Walmart, Target and China-founded Shein commenced back-to-school
deals in the first week of July, earlier than usual, to get a
jump on Amazon, which will hold a two-day Prime Day event on
July 16 and 17.
KEY QUOTE
Middle-income families are focusing more on value and willing to
shop for private label, said Stephen Rogers, managing director,
Deloitte Insights Consumer Industry Center.
"As the summer sales events have become almost the unofficial
start of back to school shopping, retailers need to have those
promotional offers ... queued up right, ready to go," Rogers
said.
Retailers and consumer products companies can expect to see a
continued volume pressure right in the back-to-school quarter,
he added.
BY THE NUMBERS
About 67% of parents surveyed may sacrifice loyalty if the
preferred brand is too expensive, Deloitte said. The survey
polled a sample of 1,198 American parents of school-aged
children.
Shoppers are likely to spend $12.60 billion on clothing and
school supplies, roughly on a par with what they spent in 2023,
and $8.6 billion on technology products, down 11% from a year
earlier.
Middle-income families making between $50,000 and $99,000 in a
year are expected to cut their spending by 9%, while low-income
families making less than $50,000 could slash their spending by
4% in 2024.
Meanwhile, higher-income families whose annual incomes exceed
$100,000 are expected to see a 5% rise in average spending to
$721 per child, compared with $689 a year ago, Deloitte noted in
the report.
(Reporting by Anuja Bharat Mistry and Ananya Mariam Rajesh in
Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas)
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