Kuwait Times

UK retailers lose sparkle over Christmas: Survey

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LONDON: British retailers faced a slowdown in sales over the crucial Christmas trading period, survey data showed yesterday, as shoppers were squeezed by higher prices and stagnating wages.

Retail sales rose 1.4 percent last month from a year earlier, according to a survey from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and financial group KPMG. That compared with 1.7-percent expansion in December 2016. “With inflation outpacing income growth, shoppers continued to see more of their spending power absorbed by essential items, including food, leaving less left over for buying Christmas gifts,” said BRC Chief Executive Helen Dickinson.

“That made this year’s festive period all the more nail-biting for non-food retailers, many of whom offered deep discounts in the last weeks before Christmas in the hope of something to celebrate.”

Capital Economics analyst Finn McLaughlin agreed that consumers simply had less cash to buy goods and services. “December’s BRC retail sales monitor suggested that Christmas trading failed to provide much relief to retailers with spending growth broadly in line with its subdued average over the past year,” McLaughlin said.

“The squeeze on real incomes has continued to leave consumers with less room for discretion­ary purchases.” Workers’ wages are still being eroded by Brexit-fuelled inflation, recent official data showed. Average weekly earnings rose by 2.5 percent year-onyear in the three-month period to October. That lagged behind Britain’s annual inflation rate of 3.1 percent.

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