UK retail sales drop as consumers eat out
British retail sales fell last month on easing lockdown curbs, as people dined at bars and restaurants instead of buying food at supermarkets, data showed Friday.
Sales by volume declined 1.4 percent in May after a 9.2-per cent bounce in April, the Office for National Statistics said.Food stores were the hardest hit, with sales sinking 5.7 per cent as Britons took advantage of reopening hospitality.
Under the phased reopening of Britain's battered economy, bars and restaurants restarted outdoor dining in April and indoor services in May.
"Instead of eating every meal at home as we all did during lockdowns, we were able to dine outside at cafes or restaurants," said Capital Economics analyst Paul Dales.
"Spending just shifted from the shops to social activities," he said, but warned however that "soft retail sales data could mean May was not as strong for the economy as we had thought".
Overall UK retail sales in April and May were nevertheless 9.1 per cent higher than the pre-pandemic level in February 2020.
The UK also reopened non-essential retail in April, allowing the broader British economy to recover further from pandemic fallout on the rapid vaccines rollout.
The economy is now expected to fully reopen on July 19, after the government this week delayed the date by four weeks due to surging Delta infections.Britain's business lobby predicted Friday that the economy is on course to reach its pre-Covid level by the end of 2021.
The Confederation of British Industry, the nation's biggest employers' organisation, now expects the economy to surge 8.2 per cent this year and 6.1 per cent in 2022.
The Covid-ravaged economy had collapsed by almost ten percent last year in Britain's biggest slump in three centuries -- and the worst performance among the G7.
Stubborn Brexit worries also fester after Britain formally exited the EU single market at the start of 2021.
Industry data showed Friday that UK food and drink exports to the bloc almost halved in the first quarter as a result of both Brexit and pandemic fallout.
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