Imperial Valley Press

English retailers fret over Christmas as lockdown 2.0 looms

-

LONDON (AP) — This year, the annual illuminati­on of the Christmas lights on London’s famous Oxford Street was very much a bitterswee­t moment.

The lights, which were turned on this week, are celebratin­g the people who helped during the coronaviru­s pandemic. They should have symbolized the start of a keenly awaited retail season following a year marked by lockdown restrictio­ns.

But with a second lockdown in England set to come into place on Thursday, shops selling nonessenti­al items such as books and sneakers have been ordered to close, at least until Dec. 2. During the first lockdown they closed for nearly three months until mid-June.

The latest decision, according to Helen Dickinson, the chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, represents nothing less than a “nightmare before Christmas.”

With much of the British economy to be mothballed once again as the government tries to contain the resurgent coronaviru­s, many firms face another battle for survival that could see unemployme­nt rise sharply. The Bank of England will likely o er more financial stimulus on Thursday, though there is little it can do to blunt the blow.

“It will cause untold damage to the high street in the run-up to Christmas, cost countless jobs, and permanentl­y set back the recovery of the wider economy, with only a minimal effect on the transmissi­on of the virus,” said Dickinson.

The announceme­nt on Saturday of the English lockdown from Prime Minister Boris Johnson was a surprise given that he had for weeks stressed his preference for more regional, targeted strategies to contain the virus. England’s lockdown follows similar restrictio­ns in Wales and Northern Ireland and the re-imposition of widespread restrictio­ns in Scotland.

With new cases showing few signs of slowing and other European countries also imposing new lockdowns, Johnson said he had to be “humble in the face of nature.” He said that without a lockdown, coronaviru­s-related deaths during the winter could surpass those in the spring.

The U.K has already recorded the most virus-related deaths in Europe with nearly 47,000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States