The Herald on Sunday

‘Now is the time to support local businesses to ensure they have a vibrant future’

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SCOTLAND is a nation of towns and as such we have all been subject to lockdown over the last few months, so the role of community has become ever more apparent and important. There have been many impacts of coronaviru­s, and more likely to come, but a common theme has been the supportive role of people and their communitie­s.

Over the last few months, people have been more restricted in their movements, with many working from home or in their immediate area. Local and community-focused retailers have reacted positively during this period. Many consumers have come to rely on local stores and suppliers, both at the store and for home delivery. Online sales have risen with growth not only in the multinatio­nal names but also in local shops and towns working collective­ly to supply local areas.

Many non-essential shops (and local cafes/restaurant­s), though, had to close during lockdown. They have been going through their own tough times but are now beginning to open up and to trade again in this new safetycons­cious, physically distanced, world. Retailers are building consumer confidence through their safety measures and protective actions.

Behaviours have changed during lockdown. The big question is whether this is a temporary or a more long-lasting alteration? Consumers have learned to explore their locality and the retailers, high streets and town centres close to them. We now need to build on this and encourage more local spend and improve support for local, often independen­t, retailers and traders.

Our towns have been struggling under the growth of online retail, decentrali­sation of many (retail and non-retail) activities and a consequent reduction in footfall, plus an over-reliance on an overexpand­ed retail sector. As these towns now reopen and more facilities become available so there is a great opportunit­y to capitalise on this enhanced local and community feel.

The polling figures reported here today show the strong support in Scotland for local high streets and towns – and the businesses trading there. There is a sense of place and desire to see local stores, businesses and towns succeed and a recognitio­n that this depends in part on local residents supporting local places.

The poll suggests that almost two-thirds of respondent­s will positively shift their spending to this end in the future. We need to ensure we capitalise on this positive sentiment by making it simpler to get to towns and high streets, make them more attractive and interestin­g, and make them easier places in which to set up local and community businesses and enterprise­s.

There is much in the media these days about shop closures and retail job losses. Less is said though about the local stores doing well and local openings. Negative stories are often evidence of a corporate restructur­ing of the entire retail sector after over-expansion and over-ambition. Larger retailers are making shareholde­r-focused national decisions. But this provides opportunit­ies for local businesses, community and social enterprise­s, non-retail users in town centres and shopping centres, and the developmen­t of an enhanced sense of place about our towns.

We are faced by a substantia­l recovery period from the pandemic. We have the added complicati­ons of Brexit and the climate emergency. Larger retailers are making shareholde­rfocused national decisions. Local communitie­s and towns are going to have to become more resilient and locally focused.

No-one claims to come from a high street – we all come from a community, a location and a town, all of which have a history, a story and a tale to tell. Towns provide the glue for communitie­s and the places to create these stories. Scotland can shop local with increased expectatio­n and confidence. Scotland needs its towns and high streets to play their distinctiv­e part in the fabric of the country. Now is the time to support local businesses and places to ensure they have a vibrant and distinctiv­e future.

Leigh Sparks is professor of retail studies at the University of Stirling www.stirlingre­tail.com

 ??  ?? There is good reason for optimism on Scotland’s High Streets, says Professor Leigh Sparks, left
There is good reason for optimism on Scotland’s High Streets, says Professor Leigh Sparks, left

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