Retail sales jumped 3.8 percent in January, beating expectations
By Sylvan Lane - 02/16/22 10:42 AM EST Retail sales rose 3.8 percent in January, according to data released Wednesday by the Census Bureau, far higher than economists had expected.
Retailers and restaurants made a seasonally adjusted total of $649.8 billion in sales last month, up from a revised total of $626.3 billion in December. Economists expected retail sales to rise 2.1 percent in January after falling 2.5 percent in the final month of 2021.
“US consumers have obviously shrugged off concerns about empty shelves and surging coronavirus cases, as revealed by today’s exceptionally strong retail sales figures,” wrote Matthew Sherwood, global economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, in a Wednesday analysis.
“As in the case of the recent jobs numbers, the Omicron variant of covid-19 has barely registered an impact, at least in terms of employment and retail spending,” he continued.
Economists had expected the record-breaking surge of COVID-19 cases driven by the omicron variant to wipe out January job growth and weigh heavily on retail sales. But consumers powered through the resurgent pandemic and high inflation, even as consumer prices rose 0.6 percent in January, according to Labor Department data released last week.
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https://thehill.com/policy/finance/594507-retail-sales-jumped-38-percent-in-january-beating-expectations