Yorkshire Post

Fears over virus could hit holiday and retail sectors

- ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR ■ Email: ros.snowdon@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN

A THIRD of consumers are prepared to cancel holiday and travel plans abroad if the coronaviru­s persists, according to new research from Retail Economics.

This could put on hold £17.2bn of holiday spending as consumers await greater clarity over the severity of the virus.

More than a fifth of concerned consumers have bought products to protect themselves from the virus. Around a third of these consumers are already avoiding contact with others and a quarter of them avoid public transport.

If the virus persists, Retail Economics expects to see a significan­t knock-on impact on the retail and leisure sector.

The research showed there is confusion over the current level of threat. Around a quarter (23 per cent) of consumers believe the coronaviru­s is a high threat to health in the UK, while around a third (35 per cent) think it is a moderate threat and two fifths (42 per cent) see it as a low threat.

Concerned consumers (those who believe the virus threat is high) are five times more likely to avoid travelling abroad in order to protect themselves from the coronaviru­s and are 20 times more likely to avoid shopping destinatio­ns such as malls.

There is further anxiety and confusion around how consumers can safeguard themselves from the virus. Retail Economics said a “staggering” 48 per cent of respondent­s will try to avoid buying online from internatio­nal sellers that ship products directly from China if the virus persists.

The majority of shoppers (81 per cent) said they are not worried about product shortages as a result of the coronaviru­s.

Retail Economics said there could be a near three-fold increase in the number of consumers who avoid shopping destinatio­ns (six per cent currently avoid shopping destinatio­ns to protect themselves from the virus and 16 per cent would consider it if the virus persists).

People who avoid restaurant­s and entertainm­ent such as the cinema could almost double (from nine per cent currently to 17 per cent if the virus persists in the future).

Retail Economics said this would see more shoppers gravitate

online, shop in less busy locations and avoid public transport.

Over 40 per cent would consider avoiding busier locations in favour of quieter destinatio­ns in the future if the virus persists, while more than a third (35 per cent) would consider buying more products online to avoid physical destinatio­ns altogether. Researcher­s said this is likely to impact city and flagship destinatio­ns the most.

However, the biggest impact will be on holidays if the outbreak continues. Over 31 per cent would consider avoiding travelling abroad in the future. Given that UK households spend around £2,200 on holidays abroad per year, according to the ONS, this could put £17bn at risk

of not being spent on travel overseas.

Retail Economics said consumers could shift this discretion­ary spending into other parts of the consumer sector or put more into savings.

Holidaying in the UK could be set to see a rise (staycation­s) while shoppers may decide to treat themselves in other ways which could trickle through to the retail sector.

Retail Economics’ chief executive Richard Lim said: “If the virus persists, consumers are likely to cut back in three main areas: holidays and travel, eating out, and using public transport. Consumers will shift this spending elsewhere as they substitute what they would have spent abroad to other areas of the economy.”

 ??  ?? RICHARD LIM: ‘If the virus persists, consumers are likely to cut back in three main areas.’
RICHARD LIM: ‘If the virus persists, consumers are likely to cut back in three main areas.’

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