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No Olympic boost for UK retailers
THE London Olympics failed to boost British retail sales as hoped last month, when households preferred to watch the games rather than go shopping, giving stores one of their worst months of 2012, the British Retail Consortium has said.
The BRC?s findings tally with other surveys and retailers? reports, showing that consumers were in no mood for a spending spree during the Olympics.
Like-for-like retail sales - or sales at stores open for at least a year - fell by 0.4 percent in value terms compared with August 2011, following a 0.1 percent increase in July, the BRC said yesterday.
The value of total retail sales, a measure favored by economists and closer to that found in official statistics, was 1.6 percent up on the year, also a slowdown after a 2 percent rise in July. "Sadly, apart from April - distorted by Easter timings - August saw the worst sales growth this year," BRC chief Stephen Robertson said.
Warm weather and the Olympics did help sales of party food and drinks but that was more than offset by a really weak performance for non-food goods, the BRC said.
"It?s clear people were absorbed by the magnificent Olympics and had little interest in shopping, especially for major items," Robertson said. "Usually reliable online sales suffered, putting in the worst sales growth since we started the measure four years ago."
The weak retail sales dent hopes that a rebound in growth over the summer will finally lift the country out of recession after three consecutive quarters of falling output.
Most British retailers have been struggling because consumers have been reluctant to spend as rising prices, tax hikes and high unemployment hurt their spending power.
A report from Local Data Company said yesterday nearly one in seven British shops remained vacant at the end of June as retailers struggled.
The government - under pressure to boost the economy - and the Bank of England have been banking on an increase in consumer spending to support growth.
The BRC?s findings tally with other surveys and retailers? reports, showing that consumers were in no mood for a spending spree during the Olympics.
Like-for-like retail sales - or sales at stores open for at least a year - fell by 0.4 percent in value terms compared with August 2011, following a 0.1 percent increase in July, the BRC said yesterday.
The value of total retail sales, a measure favored by economists and closer to that found in official statistics, was 1.6 percent up on the year, also a slowdown after a 2 percent rise in July. "Sadly, apart from April - distorted by Easter timings - August saw the worst sales growth this year," BRC chief Stephen Robertson said.
Warm weather and the Olympics did help sales of party food and drinks but that was more than offset by a really weak performance for non-food goods, the BRC said.
"It?s clear people were absorbed by the magnificent Olympics and had little interest in shopping, especially for major items," Robertson said. "Usually reliable online sales suffered, putting in the worst sales growth since we started the measure four years ago."
The weak retail sales dent hopes that a rebound in growth over the summer will finally lift the country out of recession after three consecutive quarters of falling output.
Most British retailers have been struggling because consumers have been reluctant to spend as rising prices, tax hikes and high unemployment hurt their spending power.
A report from Local Data Company said yesterday nearly one in seven British shops remained vacant at the end of June as retailers struggled.
The government - under pressure to boost the economy - and the Bank of England have been banking on an increase in consumer spending to support growth.
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