Consumers Keep Spending Like Nothing's Wrong, Confuse Economists Again
2 Minute Read
Retail sales in June rose 0.6%, exceeding expectations and once again forcing economists to quietly revise their “consumer slowdown” charts for the third time this quarter.
Despite persistent inflation concerns and rising tariffs on a wide range of imported goods—including electronics, clothing, and even some household staples—U.S. consumers apparently decided that budgets are more of a polite suggestion than a rule. The strongest spending increases were seen in online shopping, bars and restaurants, and hobby-related purchases. So, in other words, Americans are still willing to buy fun stuff, eat out, and then add it all to their carts again—this time with shipping fees and an extra import duty sprinkled on top. “Consumers are just out there buying like they forgot the word ‘recession’ ever existed,” one analyst reportedly muttered while reluctantly updating their inflationary forecasting model. The surge also hints that shoppers are adjusting rather than retreating. Instead of pulling back, many appear to be reshuffling their priorities—swapping big-ticket electronics for smaller luxuries, or as one financial planner put it, “trading Pelotons for patio margs.” Retailers, meanwhile, are breathing a temporary sigh of relief. For now, tariffs haven’t dampened demand, though shipping costs and supply chain pressures remain. Big-box and e-commerce companies are still reporting strong margins—largely thanks to strategic price hikes and a consumer base that seems determined to win the “soft landing” game by sheer willpower. Whether this bounce is sustainable remains unclear. But in true American fashion, the June data says one thing loud and clear: if the economy’s going to slow down, it’ll have to catch us at checkout.
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