Birmingham Post

Spending down again as households feel squeeze

- Vicky Shaw

CONSUMER spending fell for the third month in a row in July, marking the biggest period of decline seen since 2013, a report has found.

Spending fell by 0.8 per cent annually in July, following annual declines also recorded in May and June, according to Visa’s UK Consumer Spending Index.

It said the figures are further evidence that households are feeling the squeeze from rising prices and stagnant wage growth.

The fall in spending in July marked the first time since early 2013 that spending has declined annually for this length of time.

Transport and communicat­ion recorded the biggest annual decline in spending in July, down by 6.1 per cent. This was followed by clothing and footwear, where spending declined by 5.2 per cent year-onyear. Food and drink spending was down by 0.5 per cent annually, while spending on household goods fell by 4 per cent.

Household either fallen month since index said.

Bucking the declines, spending on hotels, restaurant­s and bars jumped by 6 per cent annually in July, while spending on recreation and culture also increased by 1.3 per cent. goods spending has or stagnated each last December, the

The report suggested the figures may have been boosted by a surge in “staycation­s” as falls in sterling have pushed up the cost of trips overseas.

Overall spending online was up by 3.6 per cent annually in July, while face-to-face spending on the high street fell by 3.7 per cent.

The index, compiled uses spending on Visa by Markit, cards as a base and adjusts the figures to reflect all UK consumer spending, not just that on cards.

Kevin Jenkins, UK and Ireland managing director at Visa, said: “Consumer spend fell for the third month in a row in July, the first time overall spending had fallen for three consecutiv­e months since February 2013.

“The figure provides further evidence that rising prices and stagnant wage growth are squeezing consumers’ pockets.

“The drop in spending was felt across a broader range of retail sectors last month, with clothing, household goods, food and transport among the worst hit.

“There were still some bright spots in July, with hotels, restaurant­s and bars reporting a 6 per cent increase. The sector is likely to have benefited from an early surge in summer staycation­s, as the weak pound made holidaying at home more attractive.”

Annabel Fiddes, principal economist at IHS Markit, said: “Alongside the renewed squeeze on household budgets, uncertaint­ies linger over the direction of the economy and the outcome of the ongoing Brexit negotiatio­ns, which is weighing down consumer confidence.

“All this makes it seem unlikely that consumer spending will recover in the current challengin­g conditions, and adds to expectatio­ns that the Bank of England will not hike rates anytime soon.”

 ??  ?? > Spending fell 0.8 per cent annually in July after declines in May and June
> Spending fell 0.8 per cent annually in July after declines in May and June

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