Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Back To School Spending Is 'Economy Insensitive' And Set To Grow, Experts Say

The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2016 11:36 AM
    TORONTO — Retail experts are forecasting an increase in Canadian back-to-school spending this summer thanks in part to the low loonie and the new Canada Child Benefit. 
     
    Business consulting firm EY, formerly Ernst and Young, predicts that retailers will see a 4.5 per cent increase this year over 2015 sales as students stock up for another year in the classroom. 
     
    EY's forecast is based on factors that include province-by-province employment numbers, housing markets and consumer spending habits over the past 12 to 18 months, said EY's Daniel Baer in a recent interview.
     
    EY also asked retailers across the country for their own sales trends and expectations.
     
    Back to school is the second-biggest shopping season after Christmas, Baer said.
     
    "What we've been seeing is stronger retail sales for a few reasons," said Baer. "The Canadian economy has been relatively strong (and) there's been some more government spending in terms of child-care benefits ... putting money into the hands of families."
     
    This year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau replaced existing child-care benefits with a program that will see the average family get $2,300 per year. The new Canada Child Benefit is expected to push tens of thousands of Canadian children above the poverty line, and could help stimulate the economy.
     
     
    The weak loonie has also encouraged more Canadians to shop on this side of the border instead of going to the U.S. to stock up on supplies or buying from American online retailers, Baer said. And a number of Americans are travelling north to shop in order to take advantage of the exchange rate, too, giving a further shot in the arm to the Canadian economy.
     
    EY doesn't expect all provinces to reap the rewards of increased back-to-school spending.
     
    The struggling oil-and-gas industry and rising unemployment in the Prairies point to lower spending, especially in Alberta, said Baer.
     
    But Alan Middleton, a marketing professor at York University's Schulich School of Business, said back-to-school spending is relatively immune to a weak economy.
     
    "They may not get the top-of-the-line laptop ... if (they are) under economic threat, but there's still going to be a whole bunch of other stuff they're (buying)," he said.
     
    Electronics stores might see fewer people shopping for new tablets or laptops, but big-box retailers like Walmart will still sell the same number of essential items, said Middleton.
     
     
    "Clothing, uniforms, paper, crayons, the whole caboodle is really quite economy-insensitive," he said. "People have to buy them." 
     
    Another factor that fuels back-to-school sales is the constant growth of the length of the season.
     
    "If you go back a decade or a decade and a half, you probably didn't really see anything happen until the last week in August," said Middleton said. "Now you're going to see it after the August holiday weekend."
     
    Stores use a marketing pitch of "don't wait to get it, we have good deals now," he added.
     
    Retailers don't want everyone to cram into their stores at the last minute because the crowds put off some shoppers, Middleton said.
     
    "Whereas if some people buy some stuff early, the observation is they're still buying even at the end (of the back-to-school season). So the total amount of buying builds up."
     
    Baer agreed that back-to-school promotions are starting earlier and ending later.
     
     
    "You're seeing a lot of promotions starting in July and going to the middle of September, even after school has started again."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fort McMurray Evacuee Wins Lotto, Will Donate To Charities That Helped Family

    Fort McMurray Evacuee Wins Lotto, Will Donate To Charities That Helped Family
      Jason Wheeler won $1 million in the July 6 Lotto 6-49 Extra draw.

    Fort McMurray Evacuee Wins Lotto, Will Donate To Charities That Helped Family

    B.C. Posts $730 Million Surplus, Housing Revenues Continue To Fill Coffers

    Finance Minister Mike de Jong says the bottom line was boosted by an increase in property transfer tax revenues of $468 million, up almost 44 per cent.

    B.C. Posts $730 Million Surplus, Housing Revenues Continue To Fill Coffers

    Big-Hearted Sikh Bikers Ride 12,000 KM, Raise $100,000 For Cancer Charity In Canada

    Big-Hearted Sikh Bikers Ride 12,000 KM, Raise $100,000 For Cancer Charity In Canada
    Twenty-four members of the Sikh Motorcycle Club rolled into Surrey, Canada, two weeks after departing for their journey to raise awareness about the devastating diseases.

    Big-Hearted Sikh Bikers Ride 12,000 KM, Raise $100,000 For Cancer Charity In Canada

    Langley Man Pleads Guilty To Attacks On People Linked To B.C. Justice Institute

    Langley Man Pleads Guilty To Attacks On People Linked To B.C. Justice Institute
    Vincent Cheung of Langley admitted to 18 charges stemming from arsons and shootings at homes and vehicles between April 2011 and January 2012.

    Langley Man Pleads Guilty To Attacks On People Linked To B.C. Justice Institute

    A Rewarding 24 Hours for Missing Person: Transit Police

    A Rewarding 24 Hours for Missing Person: Transit Police
     In a single, 24 hour period this week, Metro Vancouver Transit Police were involved in the successful reunions of seven missing persons with their loved ones, highlighting and reinforcing the value of an aspect of our job that most people are unaware of.

    A Rewarding 24 Hours for Missing Person: Transit Police

    Surrey Stabbing Suspect Arrested

    Surrey Stabbing Suspect Arrested
    Surrey RCMP have arrested and charged a suspect who is alleged to have stabbed his acquaintance on July 14th, 2016, in the 13300 block of Old Yale Road.

    Surrey Stabbing Suspect Arrested