The COVID-19 shock and consumer credit: Evidence from credit card data

J Bank Financ. 2023 Jul:152:106854. doi: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2023.106854. Epub 2023 Apr 23.

Abstract

We study the dynamic effect of the COVID-19 shock on credit card use in 2020. Local case incidence had a strong negative effect on credit card spending in the early months of the pandemic, which diminished over time. This time-varying pattern was driven by the fear of the virus, rather than government support programs, consistent with the "pandemic fatigue" of consumers. Local pandemic severity also had a strong effect on credit card repayments. These spending and repayment effects offset each other, resulting in no effect on credit card borrowing, consistent with credit-smoothing behavior. The local stringency of nonpharmaceutical interventions also had a negative effect on spending and repayments, albeit smaller in magnitude. We conclude that the pandemic itself was a more important driver of changes in credit card use than the public health policy response.

Keywords: COVID-19; Credit card use; Credit-smoothing; Household spending and borrowing; Nonpharmaceutical interventions.