BARGAIN hunters will spend £1billion less than last year in today’s sales.

Experts say it is due to train strikes, snow and the cost of living crisis.

Shoppers are set to spend £1billion less than last year in Boxing Day sales as strikes and cost-of-living take toll

1

Shoppers are set to spend £1billion less than last year in Boxing Day sales as strikes and cost-of-living take tollCredit: Alamy

Some stores, including M&S, John Lewis and Boots, started slashing prices by up to 70 per cent on Christmas Eve to clear excess stock.

Around 14.5 million shoppers will head to UK high streets today, queuing from 6am.

But Prof Joshua Bamfield, director of the Centre For Retail Research, said: “The train strikes will have a major impact and everyone has less money. Add the snow and ice and it looks pretty dire.”

He said shoppers spent around £10billion in last year’s sales, so this year’s drop amounts to a ten per cent decrease.

He added Boxing Day sales have suffered in recent years due to online shopping and Black Friday discounts.

Christmas Eve footfall was up 9.2 per cent on the previous Saturday but this was due to earlier train strikes.

The average shopper intends to buy £229 worth of items in the post-Christmas sales period — a reduction of £18 compared with 2021, Barclaycard Payments said.

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Glencore soars to record profits on back of coal prices soaring

Glencore achieved record profitability last year as supply chain snags and the…

Kick off some savings with four golden tips to enjoy the beautiful game for less

IT’S the women’s FA Cup Final today and more girls than ever…

Adobe calls off £16bn Figma takeover after clashing with regulators in Britain and Europe

Adobe has terminated its £16billion takeover of design platform Figma after clashing…

Budget 2021: what it means for people on a range of incomes

How Rishi Sunak’s measures on tax and benefits will affect single people,…