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UK retail sales plunge more than expected in September as inflation bites UK retail sales plunge more than expected in September as inflation bites
(35 minutes later)
UK retail sales fell more than expected in September, as inflation fuelled by a dramatic post-brexit vote fall in the pound, chipped away at household budgets. UK retail sales fell more than expected in September, as inflation fuelled by a post-Brexit vote fall in the pound, continued to chip away at household budgets.
According to official figures, total sales across the retail sector decreased by 0.8 per cent in volume terms compared the previous month. According to official figures, total sales across the retail sector decreased by 0.8 per cent in volume terms last months compared with August, undershooting the 0.1 per cent decline predicted by analysts.
Non-food shops performed worst, after they recorded a growth in sales in August. Growth for the third quarter of the year slowed to a year-on-year rate of 1.5 per cent, its lowest since the second quarter of 2013 and well below the 2.1 per cent pencilled in by city forecasters.
More follows… The figures provide further evidence that rising inflation has eaten into consumers' disposable incomes in recent months.
“We have not seen three consecutive months of monthly retail sales growth since last autumn,” said Andrew Sentance, former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee and now a senior economic adviser at PwC. 
“This surge in inflation is squeezing consumers and holding back the growth of retail spending in volume terms."
Figures earlier this week showed that inflation hit a five-year high of 3 per cent in September, piling more pressure on the Bank of England to raise interest rates next month.
Separate data on Wednesday showed that regular pay in the three months to the end of August was 0.4 per cent lower in real terms than it was last year, meaning that August was the sixth consecutive month of falls for real wages.
Ian Gilmartin, head of retail and wholesale at Barclays Corporate Banking said that retailers are now “faced with something of a dilemma as they enter the most important part of the year”.
“Due to intense cost pressures, prices are rising at the highest rate for more than five years, but at the same time we are witnessing a continuing squeeze on real incomes,” he said.
“As demand softens in much of the industry, retailers will have to make difficult decisions about the extent to which they are able to discount in the run up to Christmas to encourage consumers to part with their cash”.
The Bank of England has said that it expects inflation to peak at just over 3 per cent for this month and then fall gradually.