Household spending and fiscal support during the COVID-19 pandemic: Insights from a new consumer survey
ddc:330
05 social sciences
COVID-19
Article
3. Good health
Fiscal Policy
0502 economics and business
D12
H31
Consumer Expectations Survey
Household perceptions
E21
DOI:
10.1016/j.jmoneco.2022.02.007
Publication Date:
2022-02-25T16:03:54Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
This paper introduces the Consumer Expectations Survey (CES), a new online, high frequency panel survey of euro area consumers' expectations and behaviour. The paper also investigates whether public perceptions about fiscal support measures introduced during the pandemic have influenced spending behaviour. We show that simple and factual information treatments about government support policies that are communicated to random subsets of respondents can help improve consumers' perceptions about the adequacy of fiscal interventions relative to that of an untreated control group. We find evidence that this improvement in beliefs has a causal effect on consumer spending, in particular raising spending on large items like holidays and cars. Moreover, we show that such beliefs influence household expectations about own income prospects, future access to credit and financial sentiment, while they do not affect expectations about future taxes, implying no evidence of Ricardian effects in household behaviour. We find that perceptions affect spending also amongst households that did not receive any government support, suggesting that fiscal interventions can have broader consequences as they influence the behaviour of groups beyond the targeted ones.
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