Consumers delay back-to-school shopping: survey
Posted on: Sunday, 23 July 2006, 09:59 CDT
By Nicole Maestri
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. retailers have already shifted into back-to-school mode, but shoppers are not quite ready to fill their backpacks with supplies for the new school year, a survey by market research firm The NPD Group found.
Consumers are expected to start shopping later this summer for back-to-school items than they did last year, and they want to spend about the same amount of money as they did in 2005, the online survey of more than 34,000 shoppers.
"There are no must-have items" this season, said NPD chief industry analyst Marshal Cohen of the survey's results. "Nothing is really incentivizing the consumer to say 'I need to start shopping now'."
Children in previous years dragged their parents into stores to load up on hot new items, like MP3 digital music players but this year there are no new products to drive the same kind of traffic, Cohen said.
"What's different this year than last year? We're in exactly the same spot we were," he said.
Last year, NPD said that 43 percent of back-to-school shoppers had already begun shopping by August 1, and 51 percent shopped between August 1 and September 1.
But this year, NPD's survey found that 40 percent plan to shop that early, while 56 percent expect to shop between August 1 and September 1.
NPD found that 21 percent of consumers plan to spend less than they did in 2005, compared with 26 percent who responded similarly last year.
Thirty-four percent said they plan to spend more this year, compared with 33 percent in 2005, and 43 percent say they'll spend about the same amount, up from 41 percent in last year's survey.
"When you take the fact that there's no rush to the store and when you take the fact that the wallet is a little bit skimpier than it was last year ... I say we're going to see stability, we're not going to see growth," in sales, Cohen said.
NPD expects merchants, like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target to get the lion's share of back-to-school purchases. NPD also found that 27 percent of consumers expect to shop at department stores -- a 3 percent increase from the previous year. And more consumers plan to shop for shoes at footwear retailers this year than last year.
NPD said it collected information for its spending poll between June 8 and July 5 using its online consumer panel.
Source: REUTERS
Related Articles
- Photos: Got Apps? Compete's Quarterly Smartphone Intelligence Survey Provides Insight into Mobile Consumer Behavior
- As a Result of the FDA Investigation Into TNF-Alpha Inhibitors, 30 Percent of Surveyed Rheumatologists Have Altered Their Prescription Patterns for Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
- National Survey Finds 87 Percent of Internet Users Spend at Least Seven Hours a Week Managing E-Mail and Social Networking Accounts
- Aetna Releases Broadest Study to Date of Consumer-Directed Plans
- Back to School Spending on Consumer Electronics to Top $3.1 Billion in 2006
- Northampton Area Hikes Tax 5.64 Percent: Month After School Gun Incident, Board Approves More Security Funding.
- Schwarzenegger to boost school spending
- OPINION: The '65 Percent Solution': Details of School Spending Demand Explanation, Not Politics
- RACPAC Wants Council to Cut School Spending
- Health Insurers Pushing 'Consumer-Driven' Plans
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds