In their latest projections, several national central banks of the Eurosystem, expect the unemployment rate next year to be higher than today[2]. Such a scenario implies a subdued increase in real disposable income, weighing on household consumption and GDP growth (chart 1)[3]. Expectations also play a role. A study made before the Covid-19 crisis found that Dutch households with higher job loss expectations are less likely to buy new cars. They also tend to switch to cheaper ones and increase their savings[4].
At the aggregate level, the crisis has caused a huge jump in unemployment expectations of eurozone households. Chart 2 shows that, historically, these expectations are quite correlated with the growth of household consumption. There is also a close relationship with the assessment of the employment outlook in the purchasing managers’ surveys: the views of employers and employees are very much aligned. One could argue that in a post-lockdown world, the pick-up in activity will lead to an improvement of sentiment data.This has already started, with numbers for May being less bad than for April.