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Hospitality faces ‘long road to recovery’ after losing £100Bn in sales

2nd Aug 2021 - 07:00
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The latest edition of the UKHospitality Quarterly Tracker with CGA has revealed hospitality businesses suffered a £100.2Bn drop in sales during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Prolonged closures and trading restrictions limited total sector sales to end-June 2021 to an estimated £59.8Bn- down by £72Bn from the total of £131.9Bn in the 12 months to end-June 2019. Adding on the second quarter of 2020, this brings total sales in the last 15 months to £64.4Bn, £100.2Bn below the total of £164.6Bn.

The UKHospitality Quarterly Tracker is compiled by CGA and based on its Trading Index and OPM data on food and drink sales across the on-trade.

Estimated sales in the three months to end-June 2021 totalled £18.4Bn, compared to £4.6Bn in the same quarter of 2020. The sharp increase highlights that hospitality’s recovery is underway and that strong consumer demand for the sector can help to power the UK’s wider economic revival.

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UKHospitality, said: “These figures confirm in stark terms the huge impacts on the hospitality sector during Covid. Furthermore, while we hoped to be close to normal trading from 19 July, in reality hospitality businesses instead remain impeded, by the ongoing ‘pingdemic’ crisis, the pre-existing staffing shortage and the looming shadow of vaccine passports over some of the sector.
 
“History tells us that hospitality can be a leading economic force in driving an economic recovery but to do so in current conditions and with huge debt accruals, it will need further support to push it over the line and back to pre-Covid trading.

“Extension of the business rates holiday, speedy resolution to the rent problem and retention of the lower VAT rate indefinitely are more crucial than ever to safeguard jobs and businesses.”

Written by
Edward Waddell