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Retailers paying one-third of all UK business rates despite making up only 9% of economy

30 Oct 2024

Retailers and hospitality businesses are paying three times their economic share in business rates, according to analysis by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and UK Hospitality.
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How much cash do you still accept? Independent cycling retailers can respond to this survey today

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ACT parent company Bira is working with UK Finance and other organisations who form the UK’s wholesale cash industry to gain vital information to ensure businesses get the best possible... Read more…

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11 Oct 2024

ACT parent company Bira has responded to the BRC-KPMG Retail Sales Monitor for September 2024
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FSB launches blueprint to revitalise UK high streets and boost tourism

3 Oct 2024

The Federation of Small Businesses has launched a new initiative, which it says aims to transform high streets across the UK, by advancing economic, social, and cultural benefits, while also... Read more…

Award-winning gin distillery to open new shop in Morecambe

3 Oct 2024

A family-run gin company is set to open a new distillery and shop in Morecambe.
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‘Largest independent bookshop in the country’ to open in York

3 Oct 2024

Independent booksellers Topping & Company will open a new bookshop over multiple floors in central York in autumn 2025.
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Three quarters of British shoppers would ban paper receipts on eco grounds, new data shows

3 Oct 2024

3 in 4 Britons (77%) would ban paper receipts if they knew how many trees were cut down to generate them – and millennials are the most eco-conscious (rising to 87%).
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Bira Urges Chancellor to Safeguard Independent Retail in Upcoming Autumn Statement

24 Sep 2024

The British Independent Retailers Association (Bira) is set to address critical issues facing the UK's high streets at its upcoming Annual Conference, marking the event's return after a six-year... Read more…

Independent Retailers Association says steady inflation at 2.2% provides stability, but calls for interest rate reductio

19 Sep 2024

The British Independent Retailers Association (Bira) has said the inflation rate holding steady at 2.2% in August provides some stability for the high street - but stresses the Bank of England... Read more…

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Swansea shop stops selling luxury items as thefts rise

Posted on in Business News

Tying down products and stopping selling high-end items are among the measures one shop owner has taken amid a rise in shoplifting.

Shoplifter

Julie Ruscitto had two hampers worth £50, containing prosecco, stolen from the counter of her Swansea shop in April.

It was captured on CCTV and shared across social media, and the thief was ordered to pay a fine and compensation to the business.

Official figures show shoplifting in Wales has increased by 34% over the past year, with one trade union saying Wales faces an "epidemic" of retail crime.

Julie, who has been running her gift store The Chocolate Box in Ravenhill for eight years, said the thief entered her shop on a Saturday afternoon, said "alright, love" then grabbed a hamper.

"Then [he] calmly walked out the front door, closed the door behind him and then ran. I was in shock that he could just do that just so easily," she told BBC Wales.

Julie and her colleagues have put measures in place to protect items from being stolen, including tying certain items to the counter and not selling high-end products.

"We’ve had to put doors on the candle cupboard because people were pinching candles, CCTV, the front door opens with an alarm to let us know when someone’s in the shop and we’ve got mirrors.

"You've worked so hard to try and build a business up, what gives them the right to walk in and take something?

"Whether you steal something worth £1 or something worth £100 it's still stealing at the end of the day."

The largest increase in shoplifting was in south Wales, which nearly doubled with a 45% increase in the past year, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

The ONS added that figures were now at a 20-year high across England and Wales.

Jayne Keeley has run a baby clothes shop, Rainbow, in the Uplands area of Swansea for 37 years.

She said she has a defensive approach when it came to shoplifting, by having shutters and a buzzer entry door.

"Some customers said at first ‘it’s like going to a jewellers in London’, but it’s what I’ve got to do. It’s my choice to keep me and my staff safe," she said.

Jayne and other shop owners across Uplands have a WhatsApp group to notify each other of any suspicious behaviour.

"There’s not a lot of people [staff] in these little shops, it’s safety in numbers. We all look out for each other,” she said.

Fflur Elin from the Federation of Small Businesses said these extra security measures cost money.

“Businesses have experienced a long period of difficult economic headways from the pandemic to the cost-of-living crisis," she said.

"We’re hearing a lot of emphasis on growth but what we have to emphasise is that the impact of crime is financial. It also stops businesses from developing and being innovative.”

'Epidemic of retail crime'

Under the law, any goods stolen worth less than £200 is a "summary only offence", meaning these cases are unlikely to be tried in crown court.

Ms Keeley said: "We absolutely need tough regulation. People shoplift thinking they can get away with it."

In the King’s Speech, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer unveiled a new crime bill to target people who steal goods worth less than £200.

Paddy Lillis of trade union Usdaw welcomed the bill.

"This 34% increase in shoplifting across Wales is further evidence that we are facing an epidemic of retail crime, which is hugely concerning."

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