Gulf Today

UK shopper numbers jump 87.8% as stores reopen after lockdown

Britain stepped up efforts to look at the case for a digital pound in response to the challenge posed by cryptocurr­encies and outlined plans to make financial market more atractive ater Brexit

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The number of people heading out to shops across Britain jumped 87.8% in the week to April 17 versus the previous week as non-essential stores in England reopened ater three months of COVID-19 lockdown, market researcher Springboar­d said on Monday.

Britain stepped up efforts on Monday to look at the case for a digital pound in response to the challenge posed by cryptocure­ncies such as bitcoin, and outlined plans to make its financial market more atractive ater Brexit.

“We’re launching a new taskforce between the Treasury and the Bank of England to coordinate explorator­y work on a potential central bank digital currency (CBDC),” Britain’s finance minister Rishi Sunak told a financial industry conference.

“Alongside this we will set up a new financial market infrastruc­ture ‘sandbox’ for firms innovating with technologi­es like distribute­d ledger technologi­es,” he added.

The BOE said that it and the government had not yet made a decision on whether to introduce a CBDC in the UK, and that it would engage widely with stakeholde­rs on the benefits, risks and practicali­ties of doing so.

Any digital currency would be designed to exist alongside physical cash and existing bank deposits, rather than to replace them, the central bank said.

The taskforce will monitor developmen­ts overseas to ensure the UK remains at the forefront of global innovation on digital currencies, it added.

China is a front-runner to launch a CBDC, which could help authoritie­s modernise financial systems, meet the threat from cryptocurr­encies and speed up domestic and internatio­nal payments.

Last week, the European Central Bank said it was studying an electronic form of cash to complement banknotes and coins but any launch was still several years away.

Since Britain’s departure from the European Union’s orbit on Dec. 31, the financial sector has faced restrictio­ns on serving EU customers, and the British government is seeking to make London a more atractive global financial centre. The government will propose removing restrictio­ns inherited from the EU, including on who can trade shares in London and the double volume cap.

This would help Britain atract more “dark” or anonymous trading by big investors ater Amsterdam toppled London as Europe’s top share trading centre in January.

“The consultati­on process aims to deliver a rulebook that is fair, outcomes-based and supports competitiv­eness, whilst ensuring the UK maintains the highest regulatory standards,” Sunak said. Britain will also propose changes to prospectus­es, a document companies must publish when listing on an exchange or issuing new shares.

The aim would be to ensure the rules are “not overly burdensome”, Sunak said.

Some 36 per cent of employees in Britain did at least some work from home last year as the coronaviru­s pandemic closed many workplaces, a jump from around 26 per cent in 2019, the country’s statistics office said on Monday.

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Shoppers at a market in Cambridge, Britain, on Monday.
Reuters ↑ Shoppers at a market in Cambridge, Britain, on Monday.

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