Record quarterly fall for UK retail sales

Consumers feel squeeze from faster inflation as retail sales decline 0.7%

Food sales declined 0.2 per cent in UK, their first decline since the period to August. Inflation is picking up faster than wages in the UK, eroding shoppers’ real incomes.   Photograph: Julien Behal/PA
Food sales declined 0.2 per cent in UK, their first decline since the period to August. Inflation is picking up faster than wages in the UK, eroding shoppers’ real incomes. Photograph: Julien Behal/PA

UK retail sales fell the most since 2011 last quarter as consumers started to feel the squeeze from faster inflation.

Retail sales dropped 0.7 per cent from a year earlier on a like-for-like basis, the British Retail Consortium said on Tuesday, noting that the timing of the Easter holiday – which this year falls in April – may be distorting the numbers.

Food sales declined 0.2 per cent, their first decline since the period to August. Inflation is picking up faster than wages in the UK, eroding shoppers’ real incomes.

While economists predict data later on Tuesday will show the inflation rate stayed the same in March from February, a report on Wednesday is set to show wages growing at a slower pace.

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Disposable income

“First impressions of March’s sales figures are underwhelming,” said BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson. “The pressure on prices continues to build, albeit slowly, and will inevitably put a tighter squeeze on disposable income.”

Consumers have in part financed their spending, so far, by saving less and borrowing more, taking advantage of falling borrowing costs. Separate data compiled by Barclaycard – which processes nearly half of the nation’s credit and debit card transactions – showed spending climbed 4.6 per cent last month, boosted in part by higher prices of everyday goods including petrol and groceries. While confidence among consumers rose, 52 per cent said they were worried about the cost of day-to-day items and one-third said they planned to shop at more discount stores as prices climb. – (Bloomberg)