Consumers opting for online shopping over high street

Irish spending fell 0.7% on the year but rose by 3.9% in January, Visa consumer index finds

The Visa consumer spending index measures expenditure across all payment types including cash, cheques and electronic payments. Photograph: iStock
The Visa consumer spending index measures expenditure across all payment types including cash, cheques and electronic payments. Photograph: iStock

Online shopping continues to outgrow traditional face-to-face transactions, according to latest data from Visa.

Its Irish Consumer Spending Index shows a 0.7 per cent year-on-year fall in spending compared to a 3.9 per cent rise in January.

The leap day in February 2016 is seen as the primary factor for the decline in annual figures because it added a day’s trading.

The Visa index measures expenditure across all payment types including cash, cheques and electronic.

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It estimates that without last year’s leap day, expenditure would have risen in February 2017 by about 3 per cent year-on-year. Yet this would still have represented a reduction in growth and been one of the weakest rises since the series began in September 2014.

The rising tide of online shopping is also continuing. E-commerce was tracking a 7.6 per cent year-on-year growth this month, with face-to-face declining at 5 per cent year-on-year.

Clothing

“This represents the weakest figures for face-to-face spending since the series began in September 2014 and represents the fifth month in a row that expenditure in the category has experienced year-on-year decline,” Visa reported.

“It is projected that even without the impact of the leap day in 2016, spending on the high street would still have fallen year-on-year for the month of February, whereas online expenditure would have continued to increase strongly.”

Spending across the transport and communication category, which includes airlines and car sales and rentals, rose by 5 per cent year on year. Household goods recorded an annual growth of 2.4 per cent.

Consumer trade in clothing and footwear has decreased in six of the past seven months.

"February marks the fifth month in a row where the increase in consumer spending has registered at less than 5 per cent, underlining the trend that growth is slowing amid a cautious outlook by Irish consumers," said Philip Konopik, country manager for Visa Ireland.

"The other shift that is still clearly evident is the continued rise in popularity of eCommerce and it is positive to note the recent figures from the European Commission's Digital Economy and Society Index which show that Irish SMEs rank first out of 28 countries in Europe for small firms selling online."

Mark Hilliard

Mark Hilliard

Mark Hilliard is a reporter with The Irish Times