A cross-party group of MPs is to investigate how to revive England’s ailing town centres which are under increasing threat from online shopping and the financial problems facing some of the biggest high street names.
The housing, communities and local government committee has invited submissions to an inquiry that will consider what high streets and town centres could look like by 2030.
Clive Betts, the Labour MP who chairs the committee, said: “Our high streets and town centres have an important social, civic and cultural place in our society. But, many of our high streets are now struggling, facing a range of challenges including the threat posed by online retailers.
“Changing trends and behaviours in recent decades – driven by a range of economic, demographic, social and technological factors – have affected the prosperity and vibrancy of our high streets.”
Recent high street casualties include Maplin and Toys R Us, while retailers ranging from House of Fraser and Mothercare to New Look and Carpetright have all announced plans to close shops and cut jobs. Many restaurant chains are also facing problems, with the Prezzo group, Byron and Jamie’s Italian all closing branches. The Cau steakhouse chain, it has emerged, could also be shut down.
Sir Ian Cheshire, the chairman of Debenhams who used to run B&Q, warned on Wednesday that onerous leases in UK town centres are “killing more and more retailers”.
He told ITV News that the decline of the high street would accelerate unless the government reformed the tax system and landlords showed greater flexibility.
Cheshire said the current system, with business rates based on property values and many retailers still wrestling with landlord agreements that include upwards-only rent reviews, gave online-only retailers like Amazon an unfair advantage.
“What you’re seeing is retail facing more change in the past three years than in the previous 20 ... It’s a big structural shift which is basically saying old models have to be reinvented,” he said. “If you’re starting out now you’d have much less space, much more online and much more flexibility. No one will now be signing 20-year leases.”
Debenhams is closing eight of its 165 UK stores and is in talks with its landlords about reducing space at 30 more. As well as examining the challenges facing high streets and town centres, the MPs’ inquiry will consider whether councils have the correct planning, licensing, tax-raising and other tools needed to help local areas.
It is not the first time the problems facing UK high streets have been the subject of investigation. In 2011 David Cameron asked the retail guru Mary Portas to come up with a plan to save traditional high streets, then under threat from out-of-town shopping centres and supermarkets moving into non-food sectors. Now, however, supermarkets and out-of-town shopping centres are also feeling the squeeze as a result of a huge change in shopping habits.
Nearly £60bn was spent via smartphones and tablets in 2017 – a figure that equates to more than £1 in every £6 spent on the high street. While the shift is benefitting online-only retailers such as Amazon and Asos, it is forcing radical change on the country’s towns and cities as huge swaths of physical retail space becomes redundant.
The committee said it welcomes the views of the public on why their high street matters and what improvements could be made.