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Britain’s High Streets Face an Uncertain Future Amid Mounting Pressures


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The state of Britain’s high streets is reaching a critical point, with retailers increasingly desperate to attract customers. The early appearance of significant discounts before Christmas, usually a peak shopping period, highlights the dire situation. Major brands, including Debenhams, Liberty, Harrods, Hobbs, and Sweaty Betty, have already slashed prices by as much as 70%. Even Flannels, the luxury department store under the Frasers Group, has marked down gift items by 30%. For consumers, the prospect of last-minute bargains on December 23rd or 24th may seem enticing, but this trend signals significant trouble for the retail sector.

 

The pre-Christmas discounting reflects deeper struggles within the industry, exacerbated by challenging economic policies. The Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has introduced measures that critics argue are placing excessive strain on retailers. A steep rise in National Insurance (NI) charges has hit shop owners hard, particularly as many employ modestly paid, part-time staff now subject to these taxes. Adding to the burden, business rates continue to climb, and the sector must also contend with a new packaging levy.

 

The British Retail Consortium estimates these tax changes have cost the sector £7 billion. For profitable companies, such costs might be absorbed, but many retail chains are already fighting for survival. Fixed costs like NI charges and business rates apply regardless of profitability, leaving struggling shops with little room to maneuver. For some, these additional burdens may tip the balance from just surviving to shutting their doors permanently.

 

The pressure doesn’t end with taxation. Consumer confidence has been shaken by ongoing economic uncertainty and the prospect of further tax increases next year. Retail sales fell by 0.7% in October, a sharper drop than anticipated, according to the Office for National Statistics. The next update is likely to reveal even more disappointing figures. The recent revelation of a 0.1% decline in GDP has further fueled financial anxieties, with many consumers likely to reduce their spending this Christmas.

 

Energy costs are another formidable challenge. Retailers are especially vulnerable to soaring electricity prices, driven in part by the Labour Party’s ambitious net-zero targets. Unlike other businesses that can reduce energy consumption, shops must maintain lighting and heating to remain operational. For many, this adds yet another bill that feels insurmountable.

 

Britain’s high streets have been in decline for years, but the current government policies seem poised to deliver a final blow. January is expected to bring a wave of closures, with the nation’s retail centres unlikely to recover from the compounded damage. As shops shutter and high streets grow emptier, it’s clear that these pressures are reshaping the face of retail in the UK – perhaps irreversibly.

 

Based on a report by Daily Telegraph 2024-12-17

 

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Posted
11 minutes ago, portisaacozzy said:

see what 14 years of conservative rule can do,and you poor people voted them in, slight karma there !!!!

Yes, blame the internet, improved connectivity and thus online shopping on the Tories........

 

  • Like 1
Posted
23 minutes ago, portisaacozzy said:

see what 14 years of conservative rule can do,and you poor people voted them in, slight karma there !!!!

Yes, it's disgraceful how the Tories forced supermarkets and big box retailers into large off high street sites and then made online shopping the preferred alternative.

 

They also forced local councils to charge ridiculous rates to shopkeepers and to gauge shoppers on parking - they even managed to make Labour councils do this!

 

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Posted
27 minutes ago, frank83628 said:

Retail parks and internet shopping killed the high street 

It’s time for a reigning of the business rates system.

 

Bricks and mortar businesses in town centers pay business rates based upon assessments of customer access, often referred to as ‘foot fall’  the principle needs to be applied to online business to put them on a level paying field.

 

The tax loopholes used by international retail businesses ‘transfer pricing’ also places these businesses at clear economic advantage over local businesses while facilitating tax avoidance at cost to the treasury and UU economy.  
 

Add to that ‘business splitting, another tax avoidance scheme used by franchise businesses, many of which are international companies and it is clear local businesses are at a significant disadvantage to their dominant, tax and business rate avoiding, competitors. 

 

 

 

 

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Posted
44 minutes ago, mokwit said:

Yes, it's disgraceful how the Tories forced supermarkets and big box retailers into large off high street sites and then made online shopping the preferred alternative.

 

They also forced local councils to charge ridiculous rates to shopkeepers and to gauge shoppers on parking - they even managed to make Labour councils do this!

 

They did enact tax laws that facilitated the tax evasion tactics that the large out of town business take advantage of.

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

They did enact tax laws that facilitated the tax evasion tactics that the large out of town business take advantage of.

 

 

I'm sure they did. Supermarkets are big business, after all.

 

However, with the move away from the High Street, Supermarkets became as much a property business as a retailing business, the ascent of TESCO has been ascribed by one fund manager as being due to competitiveness through low cost land purchases. The founder of Foodland here stated that his low prices business model was dependent on being able to buy the site at low cost.

 

Also you get greater economies of scale with hypermarkets.

Posted
1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

 

Bricks and mortar businesses in town centers pay business rates based upon assessments of customer access, often referred to as ‘foot fall’  the principle needs to be applied to online business to put them on a level paying field.

Certainly this is the way pricing is set in privately owned malls, but it seems many councils were increasing rates against a backdrop of secular declines in footfall. They assumed they could make up for lower occupancy and lower car parking revenues by increasing the rates on the remaining businesses.

Posted
1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:


“Britain’s High Streets Face an Uncertain Future Amid Mounting Pressures” is something that has been decades in the making.

 

 

It is a secular trend. Unfortunately the creative destruction of capitalism can be brutal to the businesses displaced by the new model.

Posted
5 minutes ago, mokwit said:

It is a secular trend. Unfortunately the creative destruction of capitalism can be brutal to the businesses displaced by the new model.

It certainly does when the dice is loaded.

Posted
13 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

It certainly does when the dice is loaded.

I'm not really sure that it was to the extent that it wouldn't have happened anyway. I doubt that tax breaks alone were what made this shift viable/profitable. Also, they still pay rates on their hypermarket sites. 

 

People shopped in off high street hypermarkets because it was easier and better and the same with online. It would have happened anyway, just that the big retailers might have made a bit less doing it.

 

 

Posted
21 hours ago, frank83628 said:

Retail parks and internet shopping killed the high street 

and deservedly so. I hated going in to London to go shopping at the big stores- congested streets meant no way taking a car ( the central zone thing didn't make traffic better, though it might make local government richer ), the pavements are too narrow for the number of people, and the shops themselves are from the dark ages. Far better to shop in the suburbs where parking isn't an issue, and the stores are modern. However, as I lived in central London, it was a long journey by tube to get to them.

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