The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
The pandemic is altering what parents are buying for their kids to prepare for school,
Shoppers starting later, focusing more on electronics than clothes.
NEW YORK — For Michelle Lynn England, back-to-school shopping always meant heading to Target and the local mall with her two girls and dropping about $500 on each of them for trendy outfits.
Not this year. The Charlotte, North Carolina, mother cut her spending on clothing in half for her 10-year-old and 14-year-old and instead spent more on masks and other supplies as a surge in coronavirus cases forced her school district to extend online learning through the fall.
“The kids always looked forward to getting something new,” said England, who spent $500 in total this time around. “It didn’t make any sense to buy any extra clothes that won’t be worn.”
As the pandemic drags into the new school year, it is wreaking havoc on reopening plans and the back-to-school shopping season, the second-most important period for retailers behind the holidays.
Parents are buying less dressy clothing and more basics for their kids, while stepping up purchases of masks and other protective equipment as well as electronics. They’re also holding back on spending amid uncertainty over what the school year will look like.
“We are definitely seeing a delay,” said Jill Renslow, senior vice president of the Bloomington, Minnesota-based Mall of America, which reopened in midJune with social-distancing protocols. “People just don’t know what they need.”
Renslow said the most popular purchases are electronics like laptops and headphones. For clothing, shoppers are focusing on comfortable items like yoga pants. She’s also seeing increased sales of home decor for kids’