Visa’s Irish Consumer Spending Index, produced by IHS Markit, which measures expenditure across all payment types (cash, cheques and electronic payments), signalled a renewed downturn in household expenditure in September. At -2.0% year-on-year, the fall was the second-fastest since the series began in September 2014, behind only that seen in June.

The reduction in September followed a rise of +0.6% in August. Spending has now decreased in four of the past five months. On a quarterly basis, Q3 saw a fall in spending of -0.6% year-on-year, broadly similar to the -0.9% reduction seen in Q2.

Expenditure decreased across both Face-to-Face and online channels during September. Face-to-Face spending decreased for the fourth time in the past five months, and at a solid pace (-2.7% year-on-year). The reduction in eCommerce spending was more modest by comparison (-0.8%), but ended a two-month sequence of expansion.

Six of the eight monitored sectors saw spending decrease year-on-year in September, the only exceptions being Hotels, Restaurants & Bars (+4.7%) and Recreation & Culture (+2.7%.) The Clothing & Footwear sector continued to struggle, seeing a -7.0% reduction in spending. This was the sharpest decline in five years.

Household Goods expenditure decreased for the first time since the series began in September 2014 (-0.7% year-on-year), while Food & Drink (-0.7%), Transport & Communication (-1.9%) and Health & Education (-3.8%) all recorded declines in spend following rises in August.

Philip Konopik, Ireland Country Manager, Visa said:

“We are seeing a clear trend of a slowdown in Irish consumer spending with falls in household expenditure in four of the last five months. The only positive notes in September were growth for the Hotels, Restaurants & Bars and Recreation & Culture sectors, which is a testament to the shift in shopping behaviour with people keen to spend their money on experiences, rather than material goods.”

Andrew Harker, Associate Director at IHS Markit said:

“These are challenging times for Irish retailers, with consumers seemingly reining in spending in line with declining confidence. The Clothing & Footwear sector is particularly under pressure, with even the normally reliable Household Goods category seeing a decline in September. Only the more experience-based areas of consumer spending were able to generate growth.”


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