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Retail footfall hurt by rail strikes and snow: Springboard

Retail footfall hurt by rail strikes and snow: Springboard
Snow-covered roads are seen ahead of the morning rush-hour on December 12, 2022 in London, England. Snow and ice disrupted rail travel and closed schools in parts of southeast England on Monday. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
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British retailers have been hurt by a sharp dip in shopper numbers this week, a crucial Christmas trading period, as snowy weather and a national rail strike deterred people from venturing out, researcher Springboard said on Friday.

It said shopper numbers, or footfall, in UK retail destinations from Monday to 1100 GMT on Friday was down 7.5 per cent from the week before.


Springboard said traffic was particularly weak on high streets - down 14 per cent on last week.

"The impact on high streets will have emanated from a mix of employees choosing to work at home due to the rail strike, and the cancellation of shopping and leisure trips. The cold weather is also likely to have played a part," it said.

On a year-on-year basis total footfall is down 3.8 per cent so far this week, it added.

GettyImages 1245576560 Commuters wait for an extremely delayed Central Line train at Stratford station in London on December 13, 2022 as rail strikes began a wave of festive walkouts in the country. (Photo by DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images)

With UK inflation running at 10.7 per cent and consumer confidence close to record lows, retailers were already fearing a muted Christmas trading period, with a raft of surveys showing most consumers plan to do less holiday shopping this year.

Several British retailers have cautioned on the outlook in recent months, highlighting the stress felt by many households as the cost-of-living crisis eats into their finances.

Official data published on Friday showed retail sales slid unexpectedly in November, despite the men's soccer World Cup and Black Friday sales promotions.

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