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Retail & Consumer

Pandemic has cost cities in Wales more than 22 weeks’ worth of high street sales, reveals new report

Centre for Cities’ annual economic report has revealed the Welsh cities hit hardest by the pandemic

Queen Street in Cardiff Central(Image: Mark Lewis)

The pandemic has cost cities in Wales more than 22 weeks’ worth of high street sales. according to new research from Centre for Cities.

The economic think tank has published Cities Outlook 2022, its annual assessment of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest urban areas and how they have been impacted by Covid.

It found that Covid-19 has cost some city centres in Wales almost half a year’s worth of potential takings since March 2020.

Central Cardiff is worst affected, losing 43 weeks of sales between the first lockdown and the onset of the latest Omicron variant. Businesses in Swansea and Newport city centres have also been hard hit.

Cardiff has lost the 43 weeks' worth of high street sales, the highest in Wales

In prosperous city centres, lost sales are linked to an increase in business closures.

The number of empty storefronts in Cardiff city centre increased by around six percentage points as sales fell — the fifth highest rise in Great Britain.

In prosperous cities like the Welsh capital, lost sales are linked to an increase in business closures

While central Newport has more vacant units than anywhere else in Great Britain.

In Newport, 33% of units in the city are vacant

The report also found that Covid-19 has cost businesses in city and large town centres across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ more than a third (35%) of their potential takings since March 2020, with central London, Birmingham, Edinburgh and Cardiff worst affected.