UK retail sector axed 150\,000 jobs in 2018: study

UK retail sector axed 150,000 jobs in 2018: study

AFP  |  London 

Troubled UK high-street retailers shed almost 150,000 jobs this year, hit by high business property taxation, flagging growth and rising online sales, a study showed Monday.

And more gloom is forecast next year as retailers continue to struggle in anticipation of Britain's departure from the

"While parliament is obsessed with Brexit, business rates and low growth are killing the high street," said Joshua Bamfield, who is of the CRR consultancy.

"We feel that 2019 is going to be a repeat of these dire figures unless or until the government takes action to provide a level playing field for both and the high street." This year, a string of major British retailers fell victim to fierce online competition, rising business taxes and stretched household budgets -- all coming amid Brexit uncertainty.

One major casualty, British Poundworld, collapsed earlier this year with the loss of some 5,100 jobs.

meanwhile decided to shut about one third of its shops. That came after its UK rival was rescued from collapse having been bought by retailer

argues that rising business rates -- a taxation which is levied on non-domestic property use -- have piled on pressure.

Despite the gloom, official data showed last week that sales rebounded in November as shoppers bagged Black Friday bargains.

Sales jumped 1.4 per cent compared to October, the calculated, with helped by heavy price discounts.

But the outlook for consumers is weak. Consumer confidence dived to a five-year low in December, according to a survey published last Friday.

"Consumer surveys show that people are not feeling confident about the future, despite an increase in wages," said Stephen Beer, at

"This is partly due to interest rates going up and the mood music from the " The central froze its main lending rate at 0.75 percent faced with "intensified Brexit uncertainties".

The BoE had in August voted unanimously to raise the rate by a quarter-point to 0.75 percent amid Brexit-fuelled UK inflation.

That was only the second hike since the global financial crisis a decade ago and was in response to above-target UK annual inflation.

Rising interest rates leave borrowers with less disposable income to spend on the high street.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, December 24 2018. 16:00 IST