Retail sales slip in February

Author: Will Roberts
IFAonline | 24 Mar 2011 | 11:25

Categories: Economics / Markets

Topics: Office for National Statistics

High street shopping

UK retail sales slipped 0.8% in February compared to the previous month, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

The higher-than-expected fall in the total volume of retail sales casts a further cloud over the economic landscape after the retail price index of inflation shot to a 20-year high in February and public sector borrowing hit a record amount.

Both food and non-food stores saw falls in sales of 0.4% and 1.6% respectively, said the ONS, as hard-up shoppers stayed away from the High Streets.

Against the disappointing monthly figures, the volume of retail sales in February increased 1.3% compared with the same month last year. Sales in the three months to December 2010 also increased 0.1%.

Despite the gloomy picture on the high street, Chancellor George Osborne yesterday unveiled a number of sweeteners for hard-up households, including a freeze on council tax and the scrapping of the fuel price escalator.

More economics / markets news

Recommended reading

Categories

Topics

Comments

There are no comments submitted yet. Do you have an interesting opinion? Then be the first to post a comment

Related articles

Most Read

Audio / Visual

Coffee Lounge

View all the winners here

PPR Structured Product Awards 2011

View all the winners here

This year we have 14 awards designed to mark out the very best products in a highly competitive and innovative market. This includes three new awards for 2011 to reflect the developments in this rapidly growing market: Best Dual/Multi-Index Product, Best Structured (Oeic) Fund and Best Structured Product Provider.

Events

event logo

International Fund & Product Awards 2012

14 Jun 2012 - 14 Jun 2012

London, UK

event logo

British Mortgage Awards 2012

03 Jul 2012 - 03 Jul 2012

London, UK

event logo

Cover Webinars

04 Jul 2012 - 04 Jul 2012

London, UK

Poll

Should there be a cap on hourly fees?

In Focus

Viewpoints