UK's December shopper numbers defy inflation and rail strikes hit

Reuters

Published Jan 04, 2023 07:23PM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - Shopper numbers across Britain in December rose 5.8% from November and were up 9.9% compared to 2021 despite the impact of the cost-of-living crisis and national rail strikes, research company Springboard said on Thursday.

It said the gap to pre-pandemic levels also narrowed, with December shopper numbers, or footfall, 10.9% below 2019 levels compared to a 11.4% gap in November.

Christmas updates published so far from discount supermarket Aldi UK and market researcher Kantar have shown non-discretionary spending held up in December, but Springboard warned 2023 could prove more challenging.

"It is indisputable that the strain on household budgets due to the cost-of-living crisis is likely to begin to tell in January, and that the first quarter of 2023 will be challenging for retail," Diane Wehrle, the researcher's marketing and insights director said.

Despite signs that British inflation may have peaked it is still running at double digits and consumers face tighter budgets this year with higher taxes and mortgage rates and scaled back government support on household energy bills.

Springboard noted that December shopper numbers in high streets were 12.7% higher than in 2021, when footfall was dented by the Omicron variant of COVID-19.

It said footfall was 10.3% higher in shopping centres and 3.6% higher in retail parks.