Inflation piles on back-to-school shopping season
Families are generally planning to spend almost $20 more per child on school supplies.

It’s a new school year and after a summer of higher grocery and electricity bills and pretty much everything else, inflation hit back-to-school items like backpacks and notebooks.
How much families spent this year on back-to-school shopping depends on what families you’re talking to. Two thirds of shoppers planned to pull back on buying, while the rest planned to spend significantly more. That’s according to a survey from JLL where Geno Coradini leads retail.
“A lot of that is being driven through increased inflation,” he said.
When averaged out, families planned to spend about $340 a child – that’s $17 more than last year. Stephen Rogers at Deloitte said that’s because people prioritize spending on education.
“Parents are gonna make it happen, right? Parents want to set their kids up for success,” he said.
One category where families aren’t spending as much? Computers, tablets and other tech tools – because there was so much investment in those types of products when schools went remote at the beginning of the pandemic.
“Basically COVID brought a lot more technology into the classroom, more technology into the home,” Rogers said, adding that retailers use the back-to-school season to forecast the next big spending surge: the holidays. And so far, he said, we’re about as back to normal as we’ve ever been.