Violence towards UK retail staff has soared to a record level of 2,000 incidents every day with double the amount of attacks now involving weapon-wielding criminals.
The British Retail Consortium’s annual crime survey has found that incidents of violence and abuse in the past 12 months rocketed up from 1,300 offences the previous year.
And the 2,000 figure is more than three times what it was in 2020, when there were just 455 incidents a day. Incidents included racial or sexual abuse, physical assault or threats with weapons whilst 70 incidents every day now involve the use of a weapon, more than double the previous year.
Yet despite the rocketing number of offences, police nationwide are failing in their efforts to tackle the crisis with satisfaction levels of response from victims plunging even lower.
Robber Ayoub Adchiri with the gun during the robbery.
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An astonishing 61% of respondents described the police response to incidents as “poor” or “very poor” whilst a remaining 29% rated it only as “fair”.
Just 6% said it was good however 3% described it as ‘excellent’, the first time in five years that any retailers have rated it so highly.
The survey found theft had reached an all-time high with 55,000 daily offences amounting to 20 million annually costing retailers £2.2 billion in 2023/24 – up from £1.8 billion the previous year. Many more incidents are linked to organised crime, with gangs systematically targeting stores across the country, stealing tens of thousands of pounds worth of goods and rotating around multiple stores.
Measures to combat the epidemic have delivered a further economic blow to retailers, who have collectively invested £1.8 billion on measures such as CCTV, more security personnel, anti-theft devices and body worn cameras.
The Consortium says this takes the total cost of crime to an eye-watering £4.2 billion – almost a billion pounds higher than last year’s £3.3 billion cost. The immediate impact is higher prices for customers and major retailers being forced to cut jobs to make savings.
The new Government has vowed to address the retail crime epidemic through stronger measures to tackle shoplifting and anti-social behaviour, including removing the £200 threshold of ‘low level’ theft.
A male shoplifter stealing some expensive gourmet cheese in a specialty supermarket
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They also announced in the King’s Speech they would introduce a standalone offence for assaulting a retail worker. Retailers will be looking closely at the details of the Crime and Policing Bill to ensure that its protections apply to all customer-facing retail workers, from those behind the till to delivery drivers.
Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said: “Retail crime is spiralling out of control. People in retail have been spat on, racially abused, and threatened with machetes. Every day this continues, criminals are getting bolder and more aggressive. We owe it to the three million hardworking people working in retail to bring the epidemic of crime to heel. No one should go to work in fear.
“With little faith in police attendance, it is no wonder criminals feel they have licence to steal, threaten, assault and abuse. Retailers are spending more than ever before, but they cannot prevent crime alone. We need the police to respond to and handle every reported incident appropriately. We look forward to seeing crucial legislation to protect retail workers being put in place later this year. Only if the industry, Government and police work together, can we finally see this awful trend reverse.”
Cost of crime to retail sector
Paddy Lillis, general secretary of Usdaw, said: “The scale of the epidemic of retail crime is laid bare in this shocking BRC report. Crime has a very direct impact on the viability of stores, as retailers go to increasing lengths and expense to make them secure and safe. Communities are blighted by anti-social behaviour and store closures. Staff are working in fear of the next incident of abuse, threats or violence. We have campaigned along with the BRC for substantial legislative measures to combat this growing problem and we are pleased that the Government will be introducing the Crime and Policing Bill, which will meet our aims. That is only part of the fightback against the criminals and we will continue to work closely with retailers to deliver respect for shop workers.”
Chris Brook-Carter, Chief Executive of retail industry charity the Retail Trust, added: “Almost half of the retail workers we’ve surveyed told us they currently fear for their safety and nearly two thirds are stressed and anxious going to work due to this unacceptable level of retail crime. People are contacting our helpline in their thousands to report horrifying incidents of abuse and violence and many say that they are now at breaking point.
“Retailers are taking the threat to their staff’s physical safety extremely seriously and more and more of them are working with the Retail Trust to reduce the terrible toll it is having on their people’s mental wellbeing. But stronger measures are clearly needed to prevent this criminal behaviour from happening in the first place.”