- Just 58% say they will celebrate
Halloween , but average spending per person is expected to hit a record high of $91.12 this year, according to a survey this week from the National Retailers' Federation. - Halloween spending serves as a proxy for holiday shopping, and the survey points to a strong season for retailers this year, according to DataTrek.
- "Although fewer are celebrating this year, the ones who are aren't shying away from Halloween-related purchases, spending $11 more on average," Prosper Insights head of strategy Phil Rist said.
Fewer than 60% of Americans are planning to celebrate Halloween this year, as the
The National
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The Covid-19 crisis means far fewer people are planning to hold Halloween parties, go trick-or-treating or visit haunted houses. But their plans to spend more than ever on cards, decorations and candy bodes well for retail spending overall.
"There are only 72 days until
"Given that Halloween spend typically serves as a useful proxy for holiday shopping, that's a positive signal," she said.
The Black Friday sales, the day after Thanksgiving mark the start of the holiday-season shopping spree, and now serves as the most telling indicator for how much Americans might spend over those crucial week.
The NRF's survey, conducted by Prosper Insights, of 7,644 consumers took place over September 1-9, over a month after the government's $600 weekly stimulus program ended and over 13 million Americans are still out of work.
Back in 2009, in the aftermath of the subprime lending crisis, individual spending on Halloween was expected to be just $55. This bounced to around $70 just two years later.
This year, 30% are planning to do their Halloween shopping online, compared with 25% last year.
"Although fewer are celebrating this year, the ones who are aren't shying away from Halloween-related purchases, spending $11 more on average, primarily on decorations and candy," Phil Rist, head of strategy at Prosper Insights, said.
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