Christmas gifts under the tree

In the USA, 20% of the Population Go Into Debt to Fund Christmas

Suppose you find out about a government program that was spending $80 billion per year, and suppose you found out that the $80 billion could have been achieved with $60 billion in spending. Would you be concerned as a taxpayer?

In 1993 Joel Waldfogel once wrote a paper titled The Deadweight Loss of Christmas, in which estimated that ill-chosen gifts caused between $4 billion and $13 billion a year in economic waste; for comparison, he cited an estimate that put economic costs of the income tax at $50 billion.

But how much does Christmas giving differ in traditionally Christian countries?

Methodology

ING produce a range of yearly Christmas reports that produce analysis from survey’s they’ve commissioned.

For this post I used the latest available published reports in 2016 titled, Presents of Mind and Christmas and New Year.

It is important to note that the study only considers the countries explicitly listed.

Results

How much do you plan on spending this year on Christmas presents? (2016)

How much do you plan on spending this year on Christmas presents? (2016)

Download chart.

Rank Country Median spend (EUR) Do not know (%)
1 United Kingdom 420 44
2 USA 360 33
3 Luxembourg 300 45
4 Austria 250 38
4 France 250 42
6 Australia 200 44
6 Germany 200 37
6 Italy 200 40
6 Spain 200 46
10 Czech Republic 180 39
11 Belgium 150 50
12 Romania 110 40
13 Poland 70 50
14 Netherlands 40 41

Full table.

The UK spend the most, 420 EUR on presents, that’s 60 EUR more than second place, the USA, where the population spends a median average of 360 EUR on gifts.

Citizens in the Netherlands spend the least by far — just 40 EUR on Christmas Day gifts. It is worth noting though, countries hold Christmas-type celebrations at different times. In the Netherlands, Sinterklaas on 5 and 6 December – the feast of St Nicholas – means less may be spent on 24 and 25 December than in other countries that focus on a single day.

Interestingly in all countries, between 30% and 50% of those surveyed has no idea how much they spent, which could mean spending being significantly higher than figures reported!

Potential wasted spending (2016)

Potential wasted spending (2016) 

Download chart.

Country Wasted money EUR (assuming loss 20%)
United Kingdom 84
USA 72
Luxembourg 60
Austria 50
France 50
Australia 40
Germany 40
Italy 40
Spain 40
Czech Republic 36
Belgium 30
Romania 22
Poland 14
Netherlands 8

Full table.

Assuming Joel Waldfogel’s assumption of an average spend of about 20% being spent on unwanted gifts, UK citizens wasted 84 EUR on unwanted gifts in 2016.

Did you get into debt to fund Christmas celebrations? (2016)

Did you get into debt to fund Christmas celebrations? (2016)

Download chart.

Rank Country Went into debt for Christmas %
1 USA 20
2 Romania 16
3 United Kingdom 15
4 Australia 12
5 France 10
6 Spain 9
6 Poland 9
8 Italy 8
9 Czech Republic 7
10 Germany 6
10 Belgium 6
12 Luxembourg 5
13 Austria 4
14 Netherlands 3

Full table.

In the USA, around one-fifth of people spend Christmas in the red, while the people of the Netherlands are least likely to go into debt to finance the festivities (which is understandable given the reported spending).

The report found 40% of people say Christmas is the one time they spend money without worrying about it and also that a significant number of those polled feel forced to spend money.

What type of gifts did you receive for Christmas last year? (2016)

What type of gifts did you receive for Christmas last year? (2016)

Download chart.

Country Practical gifts % Leisure gifts % Money % Gift cards % Luxurious or special gifts % Didn’t receive any % Can’t remember %
United Kingdom 50 31 26 25 22 10 13
USA 53 25 25 40 19 30 8
Luxembourg 40 37 26 14 17 15 11
Austria 41 31 32 34 12 16 7
France 38 30 23 15 12 18 9
Australia 43 21 15 28 11 18 15
Germany 38 25 27 26 15 20 8
Italy 50 23 17 8 12 19 12
Spain 58 30 17 7 15 18 5
Czech Republic 70 44 29 12 10 6 7
Belgium 33 20 18 20 10 25 10
Romania 57 17 14 1 6 18 13
Poland 52 23 18 8 11 15 11
Netherlands 21 14 5 11 10 50 8

Download table.

Across Europe, 46% say they got practical gifts such as household items for Christmas last year. Twenty-six percent received presents related to hobbies or leisure.

Twenty-one percent in Europe say they received money presents in 2015; 16% received gift cards, while 14% got luxuries or other “special” items. More Czechs (70%) are practical gift givers.

Half in the Netherlands say they received no Christmas gifts last year. Potential reasons may include the Sinterklaas festival, marked in the Netherlands and in parts of Belgium earlier in December, as noted previously.

Improvements

This post considers aggregated statistics from a study conducted by ING in 2016. It would be really interesting to consider spending intentions in subsequent year, especially this year, where COVID-19 is likely to have a significant negative impact on spending intentions.

tl;dr

UK citizens spend the most on Christmas gifts (420 EU) with Dutch citizens spending the least (40 EUR). In all countries, a significant number of gift givers actually having no idea what they spend.

Footnotes

  1. Data sources + data used in this post.
Facebook Comments

Travel Geek?

Join over 10,000 travel geeks and get one email on the first Monday of each month containing travel statistics that will blow your mind.

See some of what you're missing...