Phillip Inman Economics correspondent 

UK retail sales may be up, but customers aren’t spending more money

On average, store prices fell, meaning the economy gains little from our appetite for stuff, as manufacturing continues to falter
  
  

Shoppers at Selfridges in London
Department stores did particularly well in April, but shoppers are not parting with any more cash than a year ago. Photograph: Teri Pengilley/The Guardian

Department stores were one of the big winners last month in the race to win customers. Furniture stores were not far behind. Maybe it was the onset of spring and better weather that convinced shoppers to venture out. Could it be that their outside room, sorry, their garden, needed a bit of freshening up?

Figures from the rest of the high street and online stores told a similar story: we still have an appetite for more things and we are far from reaching peak stuff.

The problem is that shoppers are not spending more than a year ago. They are using their gains from falling food and clothing prices to buy more furniture, and bits and bobs for the home. On average, store prices fell.

This means that the economy as a whole is gaining little extra from shopaholic Britons, while other sectors are slackening quite markedly.

David Kern, the chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), put it succinctly in his response to the figures for March. “The fact that average store prices fell suggests that inflationary pressures in the economy are weak,” he said.

It is a sign of weak demand if there are no inflationary pressures, Kern said, which “strengthens the argument for the MPC [monetary policy committee] to persevere with low interest rates for the time being to support the recovery.”

Kern is nothing if not consistent. He has long argued that the bedrock of the economy, manufacturing, is weaker than many suspect and more open to the global slowdown in trade than the high street.

Last week, the chancellor, George Osborne, told Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, that “the whole government” was throwing itself into supporting manufacturing. He did not mention shopping as a route out of the current slowdown.

Osborne agrees with Kern that low interest rates are an essential element of the support for making things and exporting them.

But Kern and the BCC want much more from the chancellor. Perhaps after the referendum, Osborne will dust off his “march of the makers” speech and revisit proposals for a more activist policy towards manufacturing.

In the meantime, Kern says the vibrancy of the UK high street contrasts with the manufacturing sector and “highlights the unbalanced nature of Britain’s recovery”.

“To secure sustained growth, we need a more balanced economic structure with a stronger focus on exports, investment and manufacturing,” he said. Maybe after 23 June there will be a plan.

 

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