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UK Shop Price Inflation Slows to 1% as Retailers Discount Goods Amid Weakening Consumer Confidence
Developing
Business·4/28/2026AI summary

UK Shop Price Inflation Slows to 1% as Retailers Discount Goods Amid Weakening Consumer Confidence

UK shop price inflation slowed to 1% year-on-year in April, down from 1.2% in March, as retailers applied heavy discounting to clothing, furniture and DIY goods amid weakening consumer confidence. Non-food items turned negative at -0.1%, while food inflation fell to 3.1%. The BRC warned that Middle East conflict impacts are yet to fully feed through to prices. Consumer confidence hit its lowest since October 2023, with retail sales volumes at their weakest since 1983.

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Guardian Business
Shoplifters aren't just bad to the bone or mums stealing nappies. The truth is more complex| Emily Kenway
NEWS
4/26/2026

Shoplifters aren't just bad to the bone or mums stealing nappies. The truth is more complex| Emily Kenway

Speaking to career thieves as part of my research, I learned that childhood abuse, a life in care and little education has led them to this placeEmily Kenway is a social policy doctoral researcher at the University of Edinburgh and author of Who Cares: the Hidden Crisis of Caregiving and How We Solve ItRyan* is 25 and he’s a shoplifter. He’s good at it too – about four times a week, he makes “no small money” by stealing and reselling goods from large department stores where security is limited. He’s strategic: he makes sure he’s clean and tidy, and keeps aware of CCTV. He usually steals just one or two high-value items to limit the risk of detection – designer garments or a small speaker, which he slips into a bag as he walks around the shop, before browsing a little longer and exiting.His actions are part of recent record highs in shoplifting offences. From March 2024 to March 2025, there were 530,643 offences recorded in England and Wales. This is a 20% rise on the previous year and the highest figure since current police recording practices began in 2003. There has been ample media coverage of this spike, helped by the recent scandal of a Waitrose worker being sacked after confronting a man stealing Easter eggs. Retail workers are suffering on the frontline; in its 2026 crime survey, the British Retail Consortium found that theft was “a major trigger for violence and abuse of staff”, leading the trade union for retail workers to warn that “shoplifting is not a victimless crime”. Meanwhile, the claim that Britain’s shoplifting “epidemic” symbolises a wider descent into “lawlessness” has become a familiar one in the media.Emily Kenway is a social policy doctoral researcher at the University of Edinburgh and author of Who Cares: the Hidden Crisis of Caregiving and How We Solve It Continue reading...

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Guardian Business