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    Rise in disposable income fails to boost household spending

    Household spending still £12bn lower than pre-recession levels despite a recent rise in disposable income.

    British households are still spending significantly less than pre-recession levels despite a recent rise in disposable income. In the 18 months to September 2011, the latest figures show disposable income increased by £4bn, but household spending increased by only a quarter of that.

    In a report from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) released today, it was disclosed that household spending began to fall before the recession even hit peaking at the end of 2007. The UK was officially in recession from the second quarter of 2008 until the second quarter of 2009. Since household spending peaked it has fallen by £12bn, but disposable income is at a similar level.

    John Ibbotson, director of the retail consultancy Retail Vision, said: "This report confirms what anyone who is struggling to make ends meet has long suspected; that nearly three years after the official end of the recession, the bleak economic outlook and fragile jobs market are still squeezing consumer spending.

    "Discretionary spending plummeted during the recession, and despite a modest recovery thereafter it is still anaemic at best."

    The victims of this squeeze on consumer spending include "semi-discretionary" big-ticket items such as white goods and cars. The report said "households were cautious about major non-essential purchases, but prepared to spend where they saw value for money."

    Spending on restaurants and hotels, predictably, fell during the recession but has seen an increase since.

     

    2 comments

    • NJ-ORANGE  •  3 months ago
      And if you take off the alleged effects of programmes like Q.E. that are an artificial stimulus to growth at best then we are still in recession, or have zig-zag'd in and out of it ever since.
    • NJ-ORANGE  •  3 months ago
      What Absolute Nonsense, PreRecession Pensioners and other people who tried to put something aside to provide a pension etc with Savings that provided income received rates of 5.75% which they may well have disposed of buying treats and discretionary items for their grandchildren etc. as the income they receive has not recovered to pre recession levels how on earth do these idiots think that their spending is going to recover to that level!!