Oh, I think that this time around, COVID is keeping a lid on most new spending debt other than medical (and perhaps home improvement, at least in the early days.) People who have money are sitting on it, because you never know when you might get laid off, or need cash flow to cover a major medical bill. I know we have been saving at a much higher rate than previously, and we're tightening our belts on everyday spending because of sticker shock on the things we still regularly buy.
Look at the the things NOT being purchased, largely because of lack of supply. We bought a sofa this year, which took 7 months to be delivered. We wanted to buy a couple of chairs as well, but decided not to bother, because the purchasing process right now is such a PITA. DH had planned to buy a car last year, but that didn't happen because of the lockdown and now the shortages; our youngest is now getting closer to being old enough to drive, so he plans to keep that vehicle for another 18 months or so and pass it to her to use. We used to eat out as a family probably 4 meals per week before the pandemic, plus lunch every day for DH. We've essentially completely stopped eating out except for the occasional drive-through sandwich or Chinese delivery, and DH, who never stopped going to the office, switched to brown-bagging, which I had done all along. I've bought only 4 articles of clothing for myself in the past 18 months, and DH even fewer; the only one we have purchased new items for with any regularity is the kid who is still growing.
The only place where our spending really grew was the grocery store, which took up the slack from no longer eating out, plus the rising cost of foodstuffs. We're falling back on old habits, too; resurrecting some inexpensive dishes neither of us had regularly eaten since college.