Because of the current trade wars, Americans believe they don’t have much faith in the economy. However, given how much people spend, particularly on food and beverages they didn’t prepare themselves, you’d never know it.
Indeed, there was a significant slowdown in household expenditure in April, but this was primarily due to tariffs. In order to prevent price rises brought on by tariffs, Americans increased their spending on vehicles and other products in March before cutting back in April.
However, it is unclear that consumer spending will increase in the coming months as negotiations with other nations and court battles over tariffs in the United States continue.
However, there isn’t much evidence to suggest that consumer spending will plummet and increase the likelihood of a recession. A single, significant clue? The amount that Americans spend on eating out or ordering takeaway.
Food prepared by someone else, such as a chef at a fine dining establishment, a burger flipper at McDonald’s (MCD), or a barista at Starbucks (SBUX), is one of the first things people cut back on when the economy is bad.
At the moment, Americans aren’t doing that.
Spending on food purchases increased significantly in April, according to a government study released on Friday. Earlier this month, a retail-sales survey for April was released.
Online platform OpenTable (BKNG) indicated that restaurant bookings in the last week were up almost 10% from a year ago, which also didn’t raise many concerns about a crucial indicator of restaurant sales.
However, this does not imply that restaurant proprietors are worry-free. Many fear that the escalating trade disputes may lead business to slow down.
The National Restaurant Association, a lobbying group for the industry in Washington, said an index it creates to monitor restaurant sales health revealed a heightened feeling of caution in the run-up to summer.
“Restaurant operators have a mixed outlook for sales in the coming months, while their expectation for the overall economy continues to lean pessimistic,” according to the NRA.
However, they may be overly negative.
For starters, even before U.S. courts intervened and threatened to reverse the additional duties, President Trump loosened the majority of tariffs. Economists speculate that the worst of the trade conflicts may be past.
Equally important, wages are increasing while unemployment and layoffs are still low. The economy is still creating employment, and inflation has decreased.
“The great tariff inflation scare seems to be everywhere except in the data,” BMO Capital Markets senior economist Douglas Porter described.
The majority of Americans do feel safe in their jobs, which enables them to continue spending, despite their grievances about the state of the economy. Their actions speak louder than their words.
Additionally, there are sporadic indications that the U.S. economy is recovering from the first quarter contraction in three years.
According to recent projections, the official economic scorecard, the gross domestic product, is expected to expand by 3% or more in the second quarter after contracting by 0.2% in the first three months of 2025.
The largest GDP positive seems to be a declining trade deficit, although consumer spending is expected to outpace the first quarter’s weak 1.2% growth rate.
Approximately 70% of U.S. economic activity is attributed to consumer expenditure.