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Sharpest Fall in Irish Consumer Spending in Five Years Recorded in June

17/07/2019

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Sharpest Fall in Irish Consumer Spending in Five Years Recorded in June

  • Household spending down at accelerated pace (-2.6% on the year)
  • eCommerce expenditure falls for first time in 20 months (-0.5%)
  • Clothing & Footwear sees sharpest drop in spending year-to-date (-5.5%)

Dublin, July 17 2019: Visa’s Irish Consumer Spending Index, produced by IHS Markit, which measures expenditure across all payment types (cash, cheques and electronic payments), recorded the first back-to-back fall in household expenditure in June, and the sharpest decline in spending since the series began in September 2014. At -2.6% year-on-year, the rate of contraction was sharper than that seen in May (-1.1%).

Consumer spending also fell on an annual basis across the second quarter as a whole, with expenditure down -0.9%. This was the first reduction in any quarter in the series history. The overall fall in spending reflected declines in both eCommerce and high street expenditure. ECommerce spending was down -0.5% year-on-year, the first decline for 20 months. Face-to-Face expenditure fared worse, however. At -3.7% year-on-year, the decline was the sharpest since February.

Five of the eight monitored sectors saw spending decrease. Clothing & Footwear posted a marked reduction (-5.5%), with sharper contractions registered in both the Food & Drink

(-2.5%) and Transport & Communication (-3.7%) sectors. The only three sectors to post increases in spending year-on-year were Hotels, Restaurants & Bars (+5.1%), Household Goods (+2.1%) and Recreation & Culture (+1.3%). The sharpest rise was at Hotels, Restaurants & Bars (+5.1%), where growth picked up from May. On the other hand, Household Goods (+2.1%) saw the weakest increase in spending in the near five-year series history.

Face-to-Face spending contracted for the second month running in June. Moreover, at -3.7% year-on-year, from -2.8% in May, the rate of decline quickened to the fastest since February. ECommerce expenditure also decreased in June, the first time since October 2017 that a reduction in online spend has been recorded. That said, at -0.5% the pace at which eCommerce spending fell was only marginal.

Philip Konopik, Ireland Country Manager, Visa said:

“The latest CSI figures are a cause of concern, as both face-to-face and ecommerce registered declines in consumer spending. Indeed, only three sectors posted increases in expenditure last month as Irish consumers remained cautious of their purse strings. Clothing and footwear marked the fastest decline year to date for the sector at -5.5%. While there was weakness across the majority of sectors in June, one positive note was the Hotels, Bars and Restaurants sector which saw the fastest rise last month at +5.1%.”

Andrew Harker, Associate Director at IHS Markit said:

“The June CSI figures make for concerning reading, with the rate of decline in spending the sharpest we’ve seen in almost five years of the series so far. Reductions were seen both on the high street and online, with a range of sectors impacted. On a more positive note, consumer confidence looks to be picking up modestly, which will hopefully act to arrest the decline in spending in coming months.”

ENDS