Economic Report: U.K. retail sales rise for a fourth straight month

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A shopper wearing PPE (personal protective equipment), of a face mask or covering as a precautionary measure against COVID-19, walks in an empty Covent Garden in London on June 15, 2020 as some nonessential retailers reopen from their coronavirus shutdown.

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U.K. retail sales logged a fourth straight monthly rise in August, the Office for National Statistics reported Friday.

Retail sales volumes rose 0.8% between July and August and a rise of 4% on February’s pre-pandemic level.

Non-store retailing volumes were around 38% above February, but clothing stores remained nearly 16% below those pre-pandemic levels. Home improvement retailers continued to climb in August, while household goods stores saw a rise of nearly 10% compared with February.

Online retail sales slipped 2.5% in August, but sales remained 46% higher from February’s pre-pandemic levels.

The U.K. economy has had a slow recovery from the initial coronavirus lockdowns, and the Bank of England on Thursday said it needed more time to assess whether the economy needs more stimulus, as it kept interest rates and its quantitative easing program unchanged.

The Confederation of British Industry said nearly half the U.K. firms it surveyed plan to reduce hiring or not hire at all over the next year, in its annual survey released Friday.

“We are seeing a two-speed recovery. While some firms are already looking at creating new jobs, most others are in survival mode,” said Matthew Fell, CBI chief U.K. policy director.

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