Consumers cautious as Christmas approaches

A SIGNIFICANT drop in the number of people visiting Scotland’s high streets has been ­attributed by retail experts to pre-Christmas caution.Last month, footfall dropped to the lowest level since March after a strong result in August – which had suggested that consumer spending was showing signs of recovery.
A drop in the number of people visiting high streets has been ­attributed by experts to pre-Christmas caution. Picture: TSPLA drop in the number of people visiting high streets has been ­attributed by experts to pre-Christmas caution. Picture: TSPL
A drop in the number of people visiting high streets has been ­attributed by experts to pre-Christmas caution. Picture: TSPL

The 2.7 per cent year-on-year fall was larger than that of the UK as a whole, at 2.4 per cent, according to figures today from the Scottish Retail Consortium (SRC). Its director, Fiona Moriarty, described the slide north of the Border as “disappointing”.

She said: “While recent months have hinted at economic recovery, many of us are still cautious about making major purchases and may want to focus on managing budgets ahead of Christmas.

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“We saw a similar story in last week’s Scottish sales figures, which reported a slowdown after strong growth in the summer months.”

The latest SRC/KPMG retail sales monitor showed total sales for the month were up by just 1.8 per cent on September last year, against 4 per cent and 3.5 per cent in July and August.

Moriarty added: “There’s been better news in recent weeks, with signs that customers are ­responding well to autumn collections and thoughts are turning to the festive season.”

Diane Wehrle, retail insights director at Springboard, which co-authored the footfall report, said: “Footfall generally declines over the month from August to September in high streets and shopping centres, as spending tails off with the end of the holiday and back-to-school periods.

“However, this year the 5 per cent drop in footfall in high streets and 2.1 per cent drop in footfall in shopping centres from August to September was more significant.”

• Scottish households saw a modest 0.6 per cent year-on-year growth in average discretionary income last month, largely thanks to strengthening local labour markets, a report by Asda today revealed. Across the UK, income fell slightly.

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