Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mastercard predicts back-to-school sales to be up 7.5%

Overall spending should be healthy despite surging prices on necessitie­s

- Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK – The 2022 back-toschool shopping season should enjoy strong sales increases from a year ago, fueled by a heavy demand for trendy fashion, though the growth won’t be as robust as last year when business was rebounding from pandemic-related virtual schooling.

Mastercard SpendingPu­lse, which tracks spending across all payment forms including cash, forecasts that back-to-school spending will be up 7.5% from July 14 through Sept. 5 compared with the year-ago period when sales rose 11%. For the 2020 back-to-school period, sales fell 0.8% as the pandemic wreaked havoc on schools’ reopening plans and back-to-school shopping.

Sales for the 2022 back-to-school season are expected to be 18.3% higher than the 2019 season, according to Mastercard SpendingPu­lse.

Inflation is helping to prop up backto-school sales, and overall spending should be healthy despite surging prices on necessitie­s like gas and food that are expected to put pressure on shoppers’ spending, according to Steve Sadove, senior adviser for Mastercard and former CEO and chairman of Saks Inc. Among the bright spots: department store sales for the back-to-school season should be up 13% compared to the year-ago period and up 27.3% from 2019. Clothing sales should be up 8.7% from a year ago and up 15.9% from three years ago.

“Back-to-school is the second biggest season for retailers and is often looked at as an early indicator of retail momentum ahead of the traditiona­l holiday season,” Sadove said in a prepared statement. While he expects sales growth in all areas, retailers will need to find innovative ways to entice shoppers as spending on nonessenti­als potentiall­y stretches thin as a result of increasing prices, Sadove said.

To make room for back-to-school items, retailers are marking down mounting inventory this summer, particular­ly in casual clothing and patio furniture that were in hot demand at the height of the pandemic. They’re now are falling out of favor as shoppers shift to prepandemi­c routines. Stores are also raising prices on other items as they try to offset surging costs in fuel and labor.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/AP FILE ?? The back-to-school shopping season should enjoy strong sales increases from a year earlier, fueled by heavy demand for trendy fashion, though the growth won’t be as robust as in 2021 when business was rebounding from pandemic-related virtual schooling.
ELISE AMENDOLA/AP FILE The back-to-school shopping season should enjoy strong sales increases from a year earlier, fueled by heavy demand for trendy fashion, though the growth won’t be as robust as in 2021 when business was rebounding from pandemic-related virtual schooling.

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