How Taylor Swift's Eras Tour has driven the 'girl economy' higher in 2023

Without a doubt, 2023 has been the year of Taylor Swift. From ticket sales to travel bookings, the pop star's recording-breaking Eras tour encouraged a new wave of consumer spending resiliency. Yahoo Finance’s Josh Schafer highlights Swift's economic impact this year and what early 2024 could look like in a "Swift Economy."

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Video Transcript

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SEANA SMITH: No question about it, it has been the year of Taylor Swift. She has dominated the news and pop culture since the announcement of her "Eras Tour" broke Ticketmaster at the end of 2022. Now, since then she has broken sale records, boosted the economy, and also brought a new demographic to the NFL. We're going to be spending the next hour taking a deep dive into the impact that she has had on the economy, on marketing, and more. Joining us now for the next hour, we have Yahoo Finance senior reporter Alexandra Canal.

ALEXANDRA CANAL: So excited.

SEANA SMITH: It's so much to talk about here. I think I would have been-- I was surprised by how much focus has been spent on Taylor Swift. It seems like everyone has been talking about her. Jay Powell, like we just had in our package, even mentioned the impact or didn't dismiss the impact that she has had on the economy.

ALEXANDRA SMITH: Yeah, you just think about the local economies too from the flights to the tickets to the merch. I know multiple people that traveled far and wide to go to this concert multiple times. The touch points that she has is just remarkable and it seems like you can't really replicate it. This is the pop star of our generation.

And we think about the girl summer that we had not just with the "Eras Tour" but also Beyonce's "Renaissance Tour," the "Barbie" movie, that helped boost GDP in the third quarter. In fact, "Fortune" estimates that the tour could generate $4.6 billion in US consumer spending. And that's just the "Eras Tour" alone.

And it comes at this perfect time where people want to get out there. The pandemic, people were at home. Now, live events is where it's at. And in this era, no pun intended, of inflation, the consumer is supposedly pulling back on their spending. That's not happening with TSwift.

BRAD SMITH: Well, see, here's the thing, in the experience economy, that has been, and as you mentioned, it's movie-going, Barbie. It's concert going, Beyonce, Taylor Swift. And it requires a great deal of execution to make sure that you're getting the omnichannel approach correct for all of these, whether it's in the movies, whether it's for the concert goers as well, and selling merchandise at every single turn here, and then also making sure that you stay in the news with a potential relationship as well for Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce. And so all of this considered here, I have never defined myself as a Swiftie. But I will say on a business mindset approach, I am a little bit more Swiftie adjacent at this point because of the execution--