Global Research Unlocked

Fast tax refunds and slow payments prolong stimulus, esp for high-income

Mar 11, 2026
Aditya Bhave, a U.S. economist at BofA Global Research who studies consumer and fiscal dynamics, explains how tax refund timing and lower payments shift stimulus into 1H26. He discusses card data pointing to a spending uptick, why benefits favor middle and higher incomes, regional SALT effects, and risks from weather, wildfires and oil prices.
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INSIGHT

Refunds Up But Payments Drive Total Stimulus

  • Tax refunds are up about 7% y/y through Feb but much of the aggregate ~25% stimulus comes from sharply lower tax payments, not just refunds.
  • Combining bigger refunds and smaller tax liabilities yields roughly $135–$140bn, matching Bank of America economists' expectations.
INSIGHT

Stimulus Timing Could Shift Toward Spring

  • If the stimulus arrives via lower tax liabilities rather than early refunds, timing shifts later toward tax day and into spring spending.
  • That would push peak spending effects into May or June as refunds/payments settle around April 15th.
INSIGHT

Card Data Shows A Modest Spending Inflection

  • BAC card data shows an upward inflection in spending since early 2026, consistent with tax-related stimulus or favorable base effects.
  • Comp factors include last year's CA wildfires, southern snowstorms, and February flu that depressed 2025 spending.
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