UK retail sales weaker than expected between Lockdowns

Lockdown in London as an emergency capital receiving just 10% of England vaccines

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe / Bloomberg

UK retail sales rose less than expected in December, adding to evidence that a series of Covid-19 locks are slowing the economy down.

Sales in stores and online rose 0.3% after declining in November, the Office for National Statistics said Friday. That is a percentage point less than economists expected. From a year earlier, sales rose 2.9%.

UK retail sales have plummeted even from a breakdown

The report casts doubt on the strength of the economy during the third round of restrictions that began this month. While the virus may be causing the seasonal fluctuation of the figures, December and the holiday buying season are crucial for sellers.

The pound fell 0.5% to $ 1.3667 as of 7:42m in London.

Clothing sales rose sharply in December, while supermarkets and department stores declined. The fall in retail sales will drop 0.02 percentage points off total output in the fourth quarter, the ONS said.

Online sales in 2020 were up 46.1% on value, the biggest gain since 2008.

After some rest in early December, Prime Minister Boris Johnson tightened the rules again in the middle of the month and then suspended it nationally in January, endless in sight. That ended a turbulent 2020 that wreaked havoc on traditional retailers Arcadia Group Ltd. but they picked those that traded online like Amazon.com Inc.

Other data this week has painted a bleak picture of consumer spending, which is a key driver of UK growth. The latest lockdown marks another sharp downturn this year following the economic downturn in three centuries.

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