Steep discounts on furniture and fashion weigh on January retail prices

Boxing Day spending set to top £4.6bn as Brits splurge £236 each, despite inflation worries, with more shoppers returning to high street deals.

Steep price cuts in furniture and fashion have driven retail prices in Britain down this month, though the broader rate of decline has begun to slow.

According to the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and market research firm NielsenIQ, shop prices slipped by 0.7% year-on-year in January—less than the 1% annual fall recorded in December.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, explained the trend: “Extensive January sales were good news for bargain hunters, but less good news for retailers needing to shift excess stock.” The non-food sector, which includes furniture and fashion, recorded a 1.8% year-on-year decline, compared to a 2.4% drop in December when Black Friday deals enticed Christmas shoppers.

Food price inflation eased to 1.6% from 1.8%, with fresh food inflation dipping to 0.9% from 1.2%. However, ambient food products—tinned and dried goods—experienced a month-on-month rise of 1%, led by sugar, chocolates and alcohol. The annual ambient inflation rate still edged down to 2.5% from 2.8%.

Despite the current discounting, Dickinson warned that price cuts “may not last much longer” as retailers face £7bn of new costs announced in the budget. Higher national insurance contributions for employers, the increased National Living Wage and a new packaging levy are all expected to push up prices.

The BRC’s figures often foreshadow the Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) Consumer Price Index (CPI), which dropped unexpectedly to 2.5% in December. The next CPI data, covering January, is due on 19 February, with analysts forecasting a rise in inflation due to Ofgem’s energy price cap increase and new government policies. Even so, the Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.5% at its 6 February meeting, reflecting the UK’s sluggish economic growth.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie Young is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, covering SME finance, employment law and Westminster policy since 2016. He has reported on every Budget and Autumn Statement since 2018, helped make sense of the 'covid era' and the bounce-back loan scheme from launch through the fraud investigations, and broke the magazine's coverage of the 2024 late-payment reforms. He joined Business Matters straight from completing his BA in Administration from Exeter University and is NCTJ-qualified. Reach him at jyoung@cbmeg.co.uk
Jamie Young

https://muckrack.com/jamie-young-15

Jamie Young is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, covering SME finance, employment law and Westminster policy since 2016. He has reported on every Budget and Autumn Statement since 2018, helped make sense of the 'covid era' and the bounce-back loan scheme from launch through the fraud investigations, and broke the magazine's coverage of the 2024 late-payment reforms. He joined Business Matters straight from completing his BA in Administration from Exeter University and is NCTJ-qualified. Reach him at jyoung@cbmeg.co.uk