Posted
Aug 2008
The Impact of the 2008 Tax Rebates on Consumer Spending
A first look at the evidence
by Christian Broda And Jonathan A. Parker
Introduction
Early in 2008, in response to slowing economic growth, the Federal government enacted an economic stimulus package consisting mainly of a $100 billion tax rebate program. By July 1 2008, more than 70 million American households had received tax rebates of $950 on average. The hope of policymakers was that by putting money directly back into the hands of U.S. households, they would increase spending levels and avoid (or at least mitigate) the severity of the slowdown.
Skeptics argued that households would not spend their tax rebates. People tend to dislike swings in their consumption levels, leading some to believe that the one-time stimulus payment would be spent only gradually over many years. This would imply that the spending effect of the rebate would be modest at best, rendering fiscal policy ineffective. Others argued that since the money to pay for fiscal programs has to be borrowed and paid back in taxes, it’s a wash for the economy as a whole, and thus using fiscal policy to get the economy going is like “taking a bucket of water from the deep end of a pool and dumping it into the shallow end.”
So how effective has the 2008 economic stimulus program been at getting people to spend? We answer this question by tracking the weekly expenditures of more than 30,000 households who have received or are going to receive rebates, and relating their spending levels to the timing of the receipt of their rebate. Because it was not administratively possible for the IRS to mail all rebate checks at once, rebates were mailed out to households during a nine-week period between mid-May and the end of July, or deposited into their accounts in one of the first three weeks of May. The particular week in which a check was mailed or deposited depended on the second-to-last digit of the taxpayer’s Social Security number, a number that is effectively randomly assigned. This randomization allows us to identify the causal effect of the rebate by comparing the spending of households that received the rebate earlier to that of households that received it later. Because of the experimental nature of the timing of rebate receipt and the wealth of information that we are working with, we can identify the effect of the rebate on spending without the interference of other concurrent factors –like high gas prices or lower interest rates– or households characteristics that are typically hard to observe.
Main findings
We compare the weekly expenditures of households that received a rebate by June 14, to those that would later receive a rebate, but had not yet received it by that date. We use detailed expenditures covering a range of non-durable goods as reported by households in ACNielsen’s Homescan database. Because households report spending using bar-code scanners at home, we are mainly able to study spending at grocery stores, mass-merchandise outlets and drugstores
1. We use the following specification to examine the average impact of the tax rebate on spending:
lnCht =
γh + γt + β·I(Rebate>0)ht + εht
where lnCht is the log of non-durable consumption of household h in week t,
γh are household fixed effects, γt are week fixed effects, andis an indicator variable that takes the value of 1 in weeks where the household has already received the rebate and 0 in weeks prior to the rebate receipt. The coefficient β is the main parameter of interest and can be interpreted as the average change in weekly spending on non-durable goods due to the receipt of the rebate. The more effective is fiscal policy, the higher is this coefficient.
Households are doing a significant amount of extra spending because of the stimulus paymentsThe table below shows the main results from this specification for different groups of households. The first column shows the results using all households in our sample that have or will receive a rebate. Almost 19,000 out of the 34,000 households examined have reported receiving the rebate, while the remainder reported receiving a rebate later or reported that they are sure they will receive one. By the end of our sample, June 14, these households have typically had their rebates for 4 weeks. As shown in column 1, the average household increased its weekly expenditures on non-durable goods by 3.5 percent after receipt of the rebate. The impact is highest in the week where the rebate is received (not reported) with weekly spending increasing by almost 6 percent on average during the first week. We find no impact on spending in the few weeks prior to the receipt of the rebate.
Table 1 (For a larger view, click on the table)

Who are the big spenders? Households with low income or low wealth spent more than those with higher income or wealth (column 2). Households with annual income less than $15,000 increased their non-durable consumption on average by more than six percent per week when their rebates arrived, almost twice the response of the typical household. Low wealth households –households that reported not having at least two months in savings in case of an emergency– also raised their spending more than the average household when the rebate arrived.
What stores and goods benefited most from the rebate? As many retailers may already suspect, the impact of the rebate on the spending was not equally distributed across stores. While spending at grocery stores was barely affected by the rebate, consumption at supercenters and other non-grocery outlets increased significantly. In the month after the rebate arrived the share of the average household’s spending on traditional grocery stores declined by around 1 percent. The impact of the rebate also differed geographically. We are able to group households into nine regions (e.g., New England, East Central, South East, etc). Among these, the regions with the highest rise in expenditures caused by the rebates were Greater Los Angeles and the South East. For Greater LA the response to the rebate has been around 30 percent larger than the response in the average area (see column 4).
While the regression analysis is based on actual weekly expenditures of a sub-sample of non-durable goods, we also have combined these data with an extensive survey in which we asked households in the Homescan panel how they were spending their stimulus payments across items like personal services and durable goods. These survey data suggest that the categories with the least response to the rebate are clothing and food (see chart below). In particular, people report that the rebate is causing them to spend only $32 more than usual on clothing and footwear on average, but over $90 in durable goods such as appliances, electronics, and furniture.
Figure 1: How much more are you spending on each of the following categories due to the tax rebate? Average responses for a survey of 34,000 households.

Implications for Aggregate Consumption
Our findings imply that the rebates are providing a substantial stimulus to the national economy, helping to ameliorate the ongoing 2008 downturn. While we can only examine directly the immediate response of spending on a subset of non-durable goods, we combine our analysis with previous work on the 2001 tax rebates to estimate the impact of the 2008 rebates on aggregate non durable consumption demand over the next few months (please see Johnson, Souleles and Parker (2005) for a thorough examination of the 2001 rebate).
In aggregate, the 2008 rebates total around $100 billion, which is about four percent of aggregate personal consumption expenditures (PCE) during the three months in which the rebates were distributed, or about 13.3 percent of PCE on non durable goods. Extrapolating from these estimates using the relative spending responses across goods observed in 2001 and extrapolating similarly over time, our estimates predict that the receipt of the tax rebates directly raised non durable PCE by 2.4 percent in the second quarter of 2008 and will raise it by 4.1 percent in the third quarter
2. These calculations do not include any potential multiplier effects, which might make the full impact of the rebates on the economy even larger, nor do they include price effects, which might mitigate their impact on real GDP.
In short, with the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008, policymakers tried to increase disposable income temporarily through tax rebates in the hopes that households would increase or maintain their spending levels and so end or at least mitigate the severity of a U.S. economic slowdown. We find some success: the stimulus payments are initially being spent at significant rates.
Further reading
Broda, C. and D. Weinstein, (2008) “Product Creation and Destruction: Evidence and Price Implications,” Forthcoming American Economic Review.
Johnson, D., J. Parker and N. Souleles, “Household Expenditure and the Income Tax Rebates of 2001” American Economic Review, December 2006, 96(5): 1589-1610. [Kellogg Insight article: Averting a Recession, March 2008.]
Endnotes
1For a complete description of these data please see Broda and Weinstein (2008).
2To extrapolate to total nondurable spending and to longer periods after the rebate receipt, we assume that the spending response both in other periods relative to those we observe and on other goods relative to those we observe are the same as in Johnson, Parker and Souleles (2005).
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4 Comments
Oct 10 2008
I would tend to disagree with the above findings. Any readings of the BEA releases show that personal savings were significantly up over the same period last year. The rise in personal savings in 2008 corresponds with the release of the checks in late April and continue throughout the summer. In order for the stimulus to be effective it was estimated that at least half of the amounts had to be spent by families and it appears that only somewhere in the range of 20 to 25% was spent with the rest going to savings. Now it remains to be seen what happens in the reamining months of the year. Unfortunately tax rebates may only increase spending in the short term but as per the Permanent Income Hypothesis, the long term spending habits of consumers will not change which is what is needed to keep us from a recession.
Oct 13 2008
Two things to keep in mind when looking only at national statistics.
First, you can’t tell what would have happened without the rebates—maybe saving would have risen even more and consumer spending fallen even more. Early in the year, we entered a time of great uncertainty, and when the rebates went out consumer confidence had just fallen to record lows. Yet, there was actually very little decline in consumer spending then, we have only seen a significant slowdown more recently. It is quite possible that absent the rebates we would have seen declines earlier and now have much lower levels of consumer spending. Looking at the national numbers doesn’t tell you anything about what would have happened without the rebates. But looking across individuals does (although it also cannot give the entire picture you would like).
Second, aggregate consumption data come from many different sources and early estimates are quite unreliable. People who forecast economic activity (rather than published numbers), focus on major indicators that are well measured and from large surveys, like employment and nominal retail sales.
Oct 15 2008
I realize that it is too early to see the full effect yet. We might see it as we approach the holidays and Christmas spending. But definitely just looking at the second quarter of this year, the hoped for increased consumption was not there. In May, the first month that the checks were mailed savings increased from .2% of dpi to 5% and in June it was 2.8 and 1.9, the 3 months when the checks were mailed. Where did that increased savings come from? The Brookings Institution had estimated that approximately half of the rebate checks had to have been spent in order to achieve their purpose. Personal consumption expenditures only was up by $450 million for the months of May, June, July and August. Was there some spending of the rebate checks by consumers, YES. Was it what was needed to stimulate the economy and kick start it, NO. And the whole reason why not, is the Permanent Income Hypothesis. I feel that a personal income tax rate reduction would have been more effective. The only way that rebates effectively will work is if they are given every year.
Nov 2 2008
Interesting analysis. You’re right - it is too early to see the full results. I suspect though that this delayed slightly the impending recession in the US, without having lasting effects. I argue on my blog (http://pratiksrandomwalk.blogspot.com/) that tax cuts are far more effective than government spending programs as Alistair Darling is envisaging in the UK right now. With spending plans, there is a grave risk that government misallocates resources into the wrong sectors - the ones that need to shrink in an economy, don’t. This would be harmful in the long run.
The advantage tax cuts share with looser monetary policy is that both assume the household is the best judge of their spending, rather than a central planner - which is what Darling threatens to assume.
I had been skeptical on the effects of the tax cuts in the US, believing it would go towards increased savings, or repayment of existing debt, but this analysis has been useful in some of the work I do, as well as informing my blog.