More

    Shoppers buying less, seeking cheaper items as discretionary income plummets: Asda

    Photo by DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images

    About two fifths of customers at Britain’s Asda supermarkets are buying less and swapping branded items for Asda-brand products where possible to save money amid a worsening cost of living crisis, the retail chain said on Friday (24).

    Britain’s households are struggling to keep pace with inflation which hit 9.1 percent in April, its highest in more than 40 years. Food inflation could reach 15 percent this summer and 20 percent early next year according to some forecasts.

    Asda also revealed that 44 percent of customers recently surveyed were also buying more products on promotions.

    Asda‘s comments echo those of Tesco last week, while official economic data also showed British consumers cut back on shopping in May.

    Asda said its latest monthly Income Tracker, collated by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBD), shows British households suffered another record drop in discretionary incomes in May and were 41.94 pounds per week worse off compared to the same time last year.

    It said inflation pushed up household spending on essentials such as fuel, groceries, energy bills, utilities, mortgages and rent, to 532 pounds per week – a 10.6 percent increase year on year.

    After paying taxes and essential bills, the average household had 202 pounds a week in discretionary income to spare, down 17.2 percent year on year.

    Asda said low-income households fared far worse, with their disposable income down by more than 100 percent year on year, leaving them with a negative disposable income figure of 58 pounds – meaning their income after tax did not cover essential living costs.

    It said 20 percent of households now had “negative discretionary income”, attributing it to the withdrawal of government benefits and the concentration of inflation on essential spending areas.

    The CEBD said it expected to see a month-on-month reduction in disposable income throughout 2022, hitting a further low in the autumn when energy prices increase again.

    Latest

    Purity Soft Drinks calls for ‘close communication, consultation’ to implement DRS

    Purity Soft Drinks boss, who is also the board...

    Activists boast about shoplifting food items amid record-high crime rate

    A group of self-styled Robin Hoods recently boasted on...

    London ranks among hotspots for illegal vapes

    London region has emerged as the hotspot for illegal...

    Prominent c-stores added in SPAR Scotland family

    Leading Scottish convenience and wholesale business CJ Lang &...

    Don't miss

    Purity Soft Drinks calls for ‘close communication, consultation’ to implement DRS

    Purity Soft Drinks boss, who is also the board...

    Activists boast about shoplifting food items amid record-high crime rate

    A group of self-styled Robin Hoods recently boasted on...

    London ranks among hotspots for illegal vapes

    London region has emerged as the hotspot for illegal...

    Prominent c-stores added in SPAR Scotland family

    Leading Scottish convenience and wholesale business CJ Lang &...

    Sainsbury’s shoppers like ‘speedy’ self-checkout tills, says Simon Roberts

    Sainsbury’s shoppers “like the speedy checkout” offered by the...

    Purity Soft Drinks calls for ‘close communication, consultation’ to implement DRS

    Purity Soft Drinks boss, who is also the board member of British Soft Drinks Association, has called on government, suppliers and retailers to work...

    Activists boast about shoplifting food items amid record-high crime rate

    A group of self-styled Robin Hoods recently boasted on the web about "freeing food from supermarkets" as stores across the country continue to face...

    London ranks among hotspots for illegal vapes

    London region has emerged as the hotspot for illegal vapes, both in terms of demand and availability, multiple reports have concluded. According to a study...