UK retail sales fell unexpectedly last month, capping the worst year on record after a cost-of-living squeeze and strikes rattled the industry.
The volume of goods purchased in shops and online dropped 1 per cent in December after a decline of 0.5 per cent the month before, the Office for National Statistics said Friday. Economists had expected a gain of 0.5 per cent.
The drop was driven by non-food sales as “consumers cut back on spending because of increased prices and affordability concerns,” the ONS said.
In a sign of how red-hot inflation is eroding consumers’ spending power, sales were 13.6 % higher in value terms in December compared with pre-Covid per cent levels, but volumes were 1.7 per cent lower. That means consumers are having to pay more to buy less.
If you worked in the UK there is an opportunity to boost your pension
Trump trade - a quick guide to US tariff plans
Declining birth rate means there will be fewer people of working age to support the growing number of pensioners
‘The motor industry is changing, but we’re here to stay’: BMW Ireland’s boss on EVs, innovation and the road ahead
In a sign of how red-hot inflation is eroding consumers’ spending power, sales were 13.6 per cent higher in value terms in December compared with pre-Covid levels, but volumes were 1.7 per cent lower. That means consumers are having to pay more to buy less.
Postal strikes in the run-up to Christmas drove more customers into bricks-and-mortar stores over online shopping. The share of online sales slipped to 25.4 per cent and fell by 8.9 per cent compared to a year earlier. – Bloomberg