20 Countries with the Highest Consumer Spending in the World

In this piece, we will take a look at the 20 countries with the highest consumer spending in the world. If you want to skip our overview of how spending today is vastly different from conditions before the coronavirus pandemic, then you can skip ahead to the 5 Countries with the Highest Consumer Spending in the World.

The United States is a consumer driven economy. Each year, thousands of people wait for holidays like Black Friday to splurge, and retailers stock inventories in anticipation of mega shopping events such as the Holiday Season. As a result, the health of the American economy is tied to how much Americans spend, and in 2024, the environment is starkly different from what existed before the coronavirus pandemic.

Before the pandemic struck, credit was relatively easy to score and as a result, spending was as you'd expect it to be. However, in the immediate aftermath of COVID 19, spending in key areas such as accommodation was different in a way that few would have thought would be possible in December 2019. Research from the banking behemoth JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) shows that in the U.S., consumer spending for staples products was quite high after lock downs were enforced in March 2020. Spirits saw the highest jump, along with other products such as coffee and hand sanitizers also seeing greater interest. At the same time, spending on items such as cosmetics dropped as work from home requirements changed the nature of grooming for work.

Fast forward to 2024, analysts and economists are bracing themselves for the same set of jitters that they felt in mid and end 2022. These jitters are quite relevant to consumer spending as well. Mid April 2024 is seeing the stock market and the Federal Reserve deal with a set of inflation data that they would have preferred had painted a different picture instead. Data from the Labor Department show that the Consumer Price Index in the U.S. stood at 3.5% in April, for another set of figures that overshot estimates. As a result, stocks were sharply down, and Fed chairman Jerome Powell affirmed that higher rates would need to take longer to work their way through the economy to sustainably reduce inflation.

What does this mean for consumer spending? Well, apart from inflation, spending is influenced by the economic state and the labor market. On the latter front, U.S. economic growth has been robust; so much so that some estimates believe that despite higher interest rates than what most people would like, the economy can continue to grow in 2024 nevertheless. Some of the most optimistic estimates come from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which now believes that the projected American GDP growth of 2.7% in 2024 will outpace all peer economies. The labor market is also doing well as it added more than three hundred thousand jobs in March and unemployment also dropped. Both these metrics mean that consumer spending should at least maintain the pace even though rates are high since people are finding work and are able to afford at least staples.