Initial Impacts of the Pandemic on Consumer Behavior: Evidence from Linked Income, Spending, and Savings Data

B-Tier
Journal: Brookings Papers on Economic Activity
Year: 2020
Issue: 2 (Summer)
Pages: 35-82

Authors (8)

Natalie Cox (not in RePEc) Peter Ganong (not in RePEc) Pascal Noel (not in RePEc) Joseph Vavra (University of Chicago) Arlene Wong (Princeton University) Diana Farrell (not in RePEc) Fiona Greig (not in RePEc) Erica Deadman (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.251 = (α=2.01 / 8 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

We use US household-level bank account data to investigate the heterogeneous effects of the pandemic on spending and savings. Households across the income distribution all cut spending from March to early April. Since mid-April, spending has rebounded most rapidly for low-income households. We find large increases in liquid asset balances for households throughout the income distribution. However, lower-income households contribute disproportionately to the aggregate increase in balances, relative to their prepandemic shares. Taken together, our results suggest that spending declines in the initial months of the recession were primarily caused by direct effects of the pandemic, rather than resulting from labor market disruptions. The sizable growth in liquid assets we observe for low-income households suggests that stimulus and insurance programs during this period likely played an important role in limiting the effects of labor market disruptions on spending.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:bin:bpeajo:v:51:y:2020:i:2020-02:p:35-82
Journal Field
General
Author Count
8
Added to Database
2026-01-29