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Britain’s Consumers Are Pulling Back as War and Inflation Collide

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Consumer Spending

The British consumer is beginning to crack under the pressure of rising costs, war fears, and collapsing confidence. New data from Barclays, which processes nearly 40% of all UK credit and debit card transactions, shows household spending fell 0.1% in April compared with a year earlier. That may sound small on the surface, but this was the first annual decline since November 2024 and the sharpest pullback in roughly 16–18 months.

What matters is where the declines are appearing. Travel spending collapsed 5.7%, airline spending plunged 8.3%, and retail sales dropped 3% year over year. Consumers are not cutting essentials first. They are cutting discretionary spending because they are preparing for harder times ahead.

The Iran war is playing a major role here because energy prices are once again feeding directly into household costs. Fuel spending in the UK surged 10.4% annually as oil prices climbed sharply amid fears surrounding the Strait of Hormuz and broader Middle East instability. The Bank of England has already warned that energy bills could rise another 16% by year-end while food prices may climb 7%.

This is exactly what I have warned about regarding war cycles and inflation. Wars are inherently inflationary because they disrupt energy flows, transportation, supply chains, and confidence simultaneously. Europe is especially vulnerable because it deliberately weakened its own energy security through Net Zero policies and dependence on external supply.

Barclays found that 72% of consumers believe the Iran conflict will worsen their cost of living, while nearly half say they feel pessimistic about non-essential spending. Once consumers begin building “savings buffers” instead of spending freely, economic momentum slows quickly. Meanwhile, the financial side of Britain’s economy is also deteriorating. UK government borrowing costs have surged to their highest levels since 1998, with 30-year gilt yields briefly approaching 5.8%. The pound has weakened while markets increasingly fear both inflation and political instability surrounding Keir Starmer’s government.

Consumers are cutting spending. Government borrowing costs are exploding higher. Energy prices are rising due to war. Businesses are facing higher labor and financing costs. Britain is particularly vulnerable because the economy has become heavily dependent on consumption and financial services, while productive industry has steadily declined. When consumers retreat, the broader economy weakens very quickly because there is no strong manufacturing base underneath to offset the slowdown.

Government continues pretending this is temporary volatility while simultaneously pursuing policies that increase structural costs. Wrong. Energy remains the foundation of the economy, yet Europe continues pushing policies that restrict cheap and reliable supply. Then when war erupts and oil prices surge, politicians act shocked that inflation returns immediately.

Consumers understand the situation far better than policymakers do. People know instinctively when conditions are deteriorating, which is why spending patterns change long before official recession declarations appear.