Younger consumers lead the way in improved retail expectations
Youngsters saw
improvement in expectations for the economy and household finances, helped by
rising real wages among this generation
Consumer confidence,
while still negative, saw a slight lift in May following signs of de-escalation
in the Middle East.
According to British
Retail Consortium-Opinium data, consumer expectations over the next three
months showed improvement, for example, people’s financial situation improved
to -16 in May, up from -21 in April, in tandem with the state of the economy
improving at -48 in May, up from -53 in April.
Personal spending on
retail thus rose to +7 in May, which is up from +5 in April, and overall this
remained at +15 in May, the same as in April.
However, the
proportion of people concerned that conflict in the Middle East could increase
the price of non-food rose to 74% in May, up from 73% in April.
BRC CEO Helen
Dickinson says that younger consumers are the driving force behind the
improvement in expectations for the economy and household finances, helped by
rising real wages among this generation.
“But the outlook
remains fragile: inflation is set to rise, and more than four in five people
expect food prices to climb.
“If the government
wants to keep consumer confidence heading in the right direction, it must now
make a choice: act now, or let these inflationary pressures spiral, pushing up
prices for households.
“Energy prices are
pushing up costs for retailers and their supply chains, with the government’s
energy taxes and levies making up as much as 65% of business bills.
“Cutting these charges is the fastest way to ease inflation and support consumer confidence. Delay will only make the next cost of living squeeze harder for households.”

ข้อมูลอ้างอิง
