
The pace of shop
closures on the High Street has slowed, offering a glimmer of hope for
retailers.
Town centre shops
closed at a rate of 18 a day in the first half of the year, compared with 20 a
day a year ago, according to the study by PwC and the Local Data Company.
Video and
photography shops suffered the worst drops, while hearing aid and charity shops
opened the most branches.
There was a net
reduction of just 209 shops, compared with 953 a year ago.
The study, which
looked at 500 town centres, shows the changing profile of the High Street.
There were nearly
500 net closures of clothing, shoe, furniture, photographic and video shops,
but net openings of 97 charity shops, 62 cheque cashing outlets, 53 betting
shops and 52 grocery convenience stores.
Mike Jervis,
insolvency partner and retail specialist at Price Water house Coopers, the
accountancy firm that jointly authored the study, said the results were
affected by the collapse into administration of photography shop Jessops and
video shop Blockbusters.
Matthew Hopkinson,
director of the Local Data Company, said it was "good news" that the
rate of shop closures was slowing down.
"That said,
closer examination of the data shows the significant ongoing decline of
traditional shops with food, beverage and entertainment taking their place.
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