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Economic Development

The impact of the rail strikes on the Welsh high street

Footfall recovery on Welsh high streets has been slowed by the rail strikes

A woman stands with a bag of luggage in a quiet Cardiff Central train station on June 23, 2022 (Image: Matthew Horwood)

Footfall recovery on Welsh high streets has been slowed by the RMT union rail strikes with Cardiff among the hardest hit compared to other cities in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, the Welsh Retail Consortium (WRC) has said.

Commenting on data from the British Retail Consortium, the WRC said Cardiff shopper numbers were particularly hard hit by the rail strike disruption which took place across three days and saw travel disruption throughout the week.

While London was impacted by both TFL tube strikes and RMT Union rail strikes, it only saw an overall footfall decline of 1.4% last week.

However, Cardiff recorded an overall footfall decline of 11.3%.

Footfall in the Welsh capital was severely impacted on Wednesday 22 June, the day after the first day of strikes, with visits to the city centre down by 25.4%.

The second day of strikes on Thursday 23 June saw a decline of 2.0% in footfall which dropped further the day after at -8.2%.

Footfall to city centre covering the week of the RMT Union rail strikes

Sara Jones, head of the WRC, said: “Cardiff shopper numbers appear to have been particularly hard hit by the rail strike disruption, with visits to the city centre down by over 11 percent.

"After two very challenging years and facing into the teeth of the cost of living crisis, Cardiff, and town and city centres across the country are in desperate need of visitors to help retailers bounce back after two brutally difficult years."