UK Retail Sales: First Annual Fall For 4½ Years, Real Pay Squeeze Bites

 | Nov 17, 2017 05:06

UK retail sales showed the first annual decline since March 2013 at the start of the fourth quarter. Sales were up 0.3% compared to September – beating analysts’ expectations of a mere 0.1% rise – but down 0.3% on the same period last year, according to the Office for National Statistics.

The annual comparison suffered due to an especially strong October last year, when growth peaked at 7.4%. However, the extent to which annual sales growth has slipped from boom to decline over the course of a year underscores the plight faced by retailers and the degree to which households are being squeezed.

As to the cause of the deteriorating trend in the retail sector, fingers generally point to the ongoing double-whammy of rising prices and weak pay growth. Real pay has been in continual decline since February, with the latest numbers showing inflation rising at 3.0% but regular pay growth at just 2.2%. Food prices are rising at their fastest rate for four years.