Shop vacancy rate in Britain’s town centres hits highest level in four years

The number of empty shops in town centres has reached its highest level since 2015, figures have shown.
The national vacancy rate was 10.3% in July, the highest since January 2015, according to the BRC (British Retail Consortium)-Springboard footfall and vacancies monitor.
Footfall also fell by 1.9% last month, marking the worst decline for July since 2012.
Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said retailers had faced a “challenging environment”.
“High streets and town centres play an important part in our local communities, and we should be concerned by the rise in empty store fronts,” she said.
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The figures showed that high street footfall declined by 2.7% last month, while footfall at shopping centres fell by 3.1%.
Retail parks fared better, with a 1.2% increase in footfall.
Diane Wehrle, marketing and insights director at Springboard, said the rising vacancy rate “highlighted the ongoing challenges faced by bricks and mortar destinations”.
She added: “Consumer demand is ever more polarised between convenience and experience, and the stronger performance of out-of-town destinations reflects the fact that retail parks are successfully bridging the convenience-experience gap.
“They not only offer consumers accessible shopping environments with free parking and easy click and collect opportunities for online purchases, but many also combine this with an enhanced experience that includes coffee shops and casual dining restaurants, and some also have leisure facilities.”
Dickinson urged the Government to take action to relieve the pressure on the high street.
“Currently, retail accounts for 5% of the economy, yet pays 10% of all business costs and 25% of all business taxes,” she said.
“The rising vacancy figures show this is simply not sustainable. We need an immediate freeze in rates, as well as fixing the transitional relief, which leads to corner shops in Redcar subsidising banks in central London.”
Last month was also the worst July on record for year-on-year growth in total retail sales.
Figures from the BRC-KPMG retail sales monitor published earlier this month showed sales edged up by just 0.3% year-on-year in July, compared with an increase of 1.6% in July 2018.
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In the North and East quality retailers are closing shop and then replaced by charity shops, second-hand shops and pawnbrokers. In working class areas the only economic growth is the second-hand economy.
About the only shops opening up which aren’t second-hand are the bookies. I’d say gambling is quietly encouraged by the government because so few workers earn enough to pay income tax, and some tax losses can be made up by gaming taxes, however damaging it can be to many gamblers’ families.