The Cairns Post

Retail spend plummets

Consumers bunker down as bills mount

- KARINA BARRYMORE

CONSUMERS have put the brakes on spending with August recording the biggest slump in retail sales for more than four years.

Households curbed their purchases by $230 million during the month with the biggest cutbacks felt in household goods, cafes, restaurant­s, takeaway foods and groceries.

Victoria lead the cutbacks with one of the biggest slumps as hefty power bills and low wages took their toll across the economy.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics yesterday reported retail spending fell 0.6 per cent during August, with cash registers clocking up just $25.88 billion, compared with $26.11 billion in July.

The widespread slump, across all states, took economists and forecaster­s by surprise. They had been expecting a slight increase in shop turnover.

The severe fall has further raised concerns that consumers are swamped with debt and higher living costs, led by surging utility bills and stagnant wages.

“Apparently Australian­s were dieting over August,” Bank of Melbouirne economist Janu Chan said yesterday. “Today’s data reinforces the Reserve Bank’s concern that slow wage growth and rising household debt levels would restrain spending,” Mr Chan said.

“These factors will likely continue to limit consumer spending for some time. The recent strong growth in employment has not been enough to counteract these headwinds.”

The Australian Retailers Associatio­n said despite a few sectors showing increased sales, including gambling and online retails, general retail has “suffered significan­tly”.

“With increased energy costs, higher tax burdens and an inflexible wage system, we need government action to increase consumer and business confidence,” ARA executive director Russell Zimmerman said.

Retails sales in Victoria, Queensland and ACT fell by 0.8 per cent during the month, followed by Tasmania and the Northern Territory at 0.7 per cent.

Western and South Australia both reported a 0.6 per cent fall by NSW was down just 0.2 per cent for the month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia