The Independent

What’s really behind Brexit Britain’s consumer spending

- OLESYA DMITRACOVA

Britain’s economy has long had all of its eggs in one basket and that basket is not as sturdy as it looks. I’m talking about the fact that spending by consumers – rather than, say, investment by businesses – accounts for over 60 per cent of our GDP. Judging by the latest official numbers, that engine of growth is still purring away happily. Retail sales unexpected­ly rose in June, defying the gloom spreading through other parts of the economy.

No doubt, high employment and strong pay growth have helped to keep tills ringing or, to sound less like it’s 1999, credit cards beeping. But the employment rate, hovering just off a record high, is unlikely to keep rising and the Bank of England expects wage growth to slow later this year.

More worryingly, shoppers have carried on spending for other reasons too, and these are a whole lot less wholesome than a buoyant labour market.

One is the rock-bottom savings ratio, a measure of income being saved. It slumped in the last quarter of 2016 following what Jon Cunliffe at the central bank recently called “a shock to real household income growth” due to the “depreciati­on of sterling after the referendum and then the inflation that came after”. The savings ratio reached an all-time record low in early 2017 and has since stayed only slightly higher.

There are also signs that today’s consumers are not quite the gung-ho big spenders of old. Government statistici­ans attributed June’s bounce in retail sales mainly to brisk trade in secondhand goods. Data shows that the quantity of such goods sold has been rising steadily since 2016, jumping 8 per cent last year.

Perhaps aware of shoppers’ increasing­ly cost-conscious mood, many retailers seem to be holding nearperman­ent sales. Meanwhile, a price war among supermarke­ts had driven food prices down and they have still not recovered to their 2014 peak, despite a spike in overall inflation since then.

This is a new world – one where John Lewis, the bellwether of retail, has seen its profits almost halve last year, largely due to discountin­g, and where upmarket Waitrose is closing stores while no-frills Lidl and Aldi are thriving.

Vacant shops and cut-price clothes strewn across shop floors do not tally with a picture of consumers in rude health.

Could this be an example of what psychologi­sts call the optimism bias? This

tendency to expect a better outcome for yourself than what actually happens affects about 80 per cent of people

Neither do some recent survey findings. Data from the Bank of England revealed last week that defaults on credit card debt are rising and at the fastest pace in two years, while a major monthly survey released yesterday showed that UK households continue to worry about job security.

For now, UK consumers are spending, seemingly unfazed by warnings about a hard Brexit. Could this be an example of what psychologi­sts call the optimism bias? This tendency to expect a better outcome for yourself than what actually happens, and what is statistica­lly probable, affects about 80 per cent of people.

The latest GfK survey, closely watched by economists, supports this idea. UK consumers quizzed in June were mildly upbeat about their personal finances over the next 12 months – though less so than they were in May – while at the same time they were extremely downbeat about the economy’s prospects.

The pessimism is bound to spread to spending decisions soon. Either we will start saving more and splurging less as the 31 October deadline nears or we won’t – in which case we will likely cut back on spending once Brexit happens and particular­ly sharply in a no-deal scenario.

No matter what type of Brexit we get, the increasing­ly precarious foundation­s of consumer spending spell trouble for economic growth.

 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? Consumers may not be quite the gung-ho big spenders of old
(Getty/iStock) Consumers may not be quite the gung-ho big spenders of old
 ?? Source: ONS ?? UK households’ saving ratio since records began (per cent, quarterly).
Source: ONS UK households’ saving ratio since records began (per cent, quarterly).
 ?? Source: ONS ?? UK households’ saving ratio in recent years (per cent, quarterly).
Source: ONS UK households’ saving ratio in recent years (per cent, quarterly).

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