As Chris said, an economy based mostly on consumption is a disaster.
If companies are struggling, unfortunately then they can't be propped up by the state, they need to fail to allow the people, land and capital tied up in the companies to be used for better use in new profitable industries or sectors.
Letting unprofitable businesses fail is a sign of a healthy economy. The economy should be organic and left to itself. Once governments start dishing out cheques people divert savings and investments from the good companies to the bad ones that the state is trying to keep going despite having any customers, earnings and profit.
You end up with zombie companies as experienced in Japan after their 1990 crash that ended up bleeding the taxpayer dry for 2 decades and paid back 100 times less than the government's so called 'investment'.
All that incentives to spend does is bring forward future consumption. We saw that with the 'cash for clunkers' schemes in the UK and USA.
Everyone bought a new car during the period when the state was subsidising purchase of new cars. Once the schemes ended new purchases plumetted.
A high savings rate, high capital investment, high exporting economy, low consumption economy is the only route to long term wealth creation.
i.e. the complete opposite of everything the West is doing currently.