How Did U.S. Consumers Use Their Stimulus Payments?
Using a large-scale survey of U.S. consumers, we study how the large one-time transfers to individuals from the CARES Act affected their consumption, saving and labor-supply decisions. Most respondents report that they primarily saved or paid down debts with their transfers, with only about 15 percent reporting that they mostly spent it. When providing a detailed breakdown of how they used their checks, individuals report having spent or planning to spend only around 40 percent of the total transfer on average. This relatively low rate of spending out of a one-time transfer is higher for those facing liquidity constraints, who are out of the labor force, who live in larger households, who are less educated and those who received smaller amounts. We find no meaningful effect on labor-supply decisions from these transfer payments, except for twenty percent of the unemployed who report that the stimulus payment made them search harder for a job.
Non-Technical Summaries
- Author(s): Alexander W. BartikMarianne BertrandFeng LinJesse RothsteinMatt UnrathRaj ChettyJohn N. FriedmanMichael StepnerThe Opportunity Insights TeamOlivier CoibionYuriy GorodnichenkoMichael WeberAustan GoolsbeeChad SyversonSumedha GuptaThuy D. NguyenFelipe Lozano RojasShyam RamanByungkyu LeeAna I. BentoKosali I. SimonCoady WingThuy D. NguyenSumedha GuptaMartin AndersenAna I. BentoKosali I. SimonCoady WingSumedha GuptaLaura MontenovoThuy D. NguyenFelipe Lozano RojasIan M. SchmutteKosali I. SimonBruce A. WeinbergCoady WingEliza ForsytheLisa B. KahnFabian LangeDavid G. WiczerPeter Zhixian LinChristopher M. MeissnerThe 2020 NBER Summer Institute's Economics of Social Security meeting featured a panel discussion on the implications of the COVID-19...
- US households report spending approximately 40 percent of their stimulus checks, on average, with about 30 percent saved and another...