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Campaigners call for "Shop Out to Help Out" scheme for independent stores

Lauretta Roberts
29 March 2021

Retail campaigners are calling for an Eat Out to Help Out-style scheme to boost independent stores as they prepare to reopen across England on 12 April.

The campaign group Save The Street was established Ross Bailey, founder of the pop-up retail space platform Appear Here. It is backed by high-profile figures including broadcaster and retail expert Mary Portas and beauty entrepreneur Charlotte Tilbury. The group has called on Chancellor Rishi Sunak to support the sector by offering customers 50% off the cost of goods at independent retailers up to a price of £10.

They suggest such a scheme could run for one month this summer with discounts available to shoppers from Monday to Wednesday only, and limited to independent enterprises with fewer than 10 employees that sell through physical stores.

Like the Eat Out to Help Out restaurant scheme of August 2020, the Government would reimburse retailers for the discount, with customers only able to use it once per transaction.

Save The Street said Treasury could levy a sales tax on online retailers or draw on the £1.8 billion in business rates relief, which has been returned by supermarkets to cover the cost of the scheme.

Mary Portas

Independent retailers classed as "non-essential" have been prohibited from physical trade for three quarters of the last year and, in many parts of the country, missed out on crucial pre-Christmas trade with everyone losing Easter trade.

UK stores are now down £27 billion in lost sales during the three English lockdowns and related closures in the other nations, according to British Retail Consortium figures, with 67,000 retail jobs lost between December 2019 and 2020.

Founder of Appear Here and founder of Save The Street Ross Bailey said: “We would be kidding ourselves to think that everything will be fine for independent retailers once they reopen on 12 April.

“The damage has been done over the last 12 months, now it is the Government’s responsibility to support these businesses and ensure they are given a fighting chance to bounce back.

Independent retail is the heart and soul of communities across the UK. If the Government doesn’t support them now, it won’t just bankrupt thousands of businesses, it will irrevocably damage the society we all live in.”

Portas added: “Covid-19 has chipped away at the brilliant diversity of our high streets up and down our country.

“We need to act now and harness the support, need and love that people have for our high streets. These local businesses during the pandemic have held our communities together. A scheme like this will bring a vital lease of life back to the places that mean so much to us all.”

British Independent Retailers Association (Bira) chief executive Andrew Goodacre said: “We know the Eat Out to Help Out scheme really brought customers back to hospitality venues last summer, and we are sure that a similar initiative for retail would have the same effect.

Much of retail has borne the brunt of this pandemic and this scheme would help give a much-needed boost to high streets and consumer confidence.”

Designer Henry Holland has created an eye-catching graphic, based on his well-known typographic slogan designs, to highlight the plight of independent retail and to urge the Chancellor to support the campaign. The graphic reads: "(Rishi) Don't make us obsolete. Save The Street".

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