The numbers: Sales at U.S. retail stores rose sharply in August in sign that Americans continued to spends gobs of money despite the spread of delta, though high inflation likely accounted for some of the increase.
Retail sales increased 0.7% last month, the government said Thursday.Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.7% drop.
Retail sales are 15% higher compared to one year ago. What’s more, broader measures of consumer spending have also remained fairly healthy even as the delta strain of the coronavirus metastasized through the country.
Read: Half of all small businesses can’t find enough workers to fill open jobs
Big picture: Americans are not spending as much as they were several months ago, but they are still spending plenty of money. More than enough, economists say, to keep the U.S. recovery from petering out.
What’s changed is what they are spending their money on. People bought a lot of goods early in the pandemic when they were cooped up at home. Things like groceries, computers, cell phones, furniture and the like.
Now they are also spending a lot more on services they shunned during the pandemic: Dining out, hotel rentals, theater tickets or airfare, to cite some examples.
The surge in delta cases has caused demand for these services to slow recently, but economists predict spending will bounce back once the latest coronavirus wave recedes. Caseloads in the U.S. are already falling.
Read: Surge in consumer prices slows in August. Has inflation peaked?
Also: The great U.S. inflation scare of 2021 isn’t over just yet
Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
and S&P 500
SPX,
were set to open lower in Thursday trades.
This post was originally published on Market Watch