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UK Shopper Numbers Rise After Launch of State-Funded Dining Scheme

Early Voting Opens for Northern Territory Election

Early voting in the Northern Territory election is underway with Chief Minister Michael Gunner one of the first to cast his vote. Gunner led Labor to a solid win in 2016 but has since been dogged by concerns for the struggling Top End economy. He’ll be hoping his deft handling of the COVID-19 crisis bolsters Territory Labor’s chances of retaining office. “Over the next two weeks, all Territorians have an important choice to make,” Gunner wrote on Facebook with a photo of him casting his vote on Monday. “To me, the choice is clear.” But that may not be the case for all voters after a recent finance report showed net Northern Territory (NT) debt will hit a predicted $8.25 billion. Opposition Leader Lia Finocchiaro said it’s a blow out…

UK Shopper Numbers Rise After Launch of State-Funded Dining Scheme

LONDON—Shopper numbers, or footfall, across all British retail destinations rose 3.8 percent last week from the previous week, with the start of a state-funded eating out scheme helping evening traffic more than lunchtimes, industry data showed on Monday.

Britain’s retail and hospitality sectors, already struggling with high rents and business taxes, were hit particularly hard by the coronavirus lockdown and thousands of job losses have been announced.

To get the country spending again the 500 million pound ($653 million) “Eat Out to Help Out” scheme offers 50 percent off the bill for eat-in food and drink—up to 10 pounds per person, excluding alcohol—on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays in August.

UK Shopper Numbers Rise After Launch of State-Funded Dining Scheme A woman wearing a face covering talks on her phone outside a shop following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Liverpool on Aug.10, 2020. (Phil Noble/Reuters)

The government hopes the unprecedented subsidy, along with cuts to value-added tax for the hospitality sector, will help to reduce job losses at restaurants, cafes, bars, and pubs, which employ 1.8 million people.

Official data published last month showed that UK retail sales excluding fuel were back to year-ago levels in June, but the recovery was driven by a boom in online shopping and extra spending at supermarkets as people ate out less.

Market researcher Springboard said that footfall rose 4.5 percent in UK shopping streets in the week to Aug. 8 compared with the previous week. It was up 3.3 percent in retail parks and up 3 percent in shopping centres.

Between Monday and Wednesday, during the Eat Out to Help Out scheme, footfall rose in retail destinations across the United Kingdom by 18.9 percent after 6pm, versus a rise of 9.6 percent at lunchtime (12pm to 2pm).

“The jury is still out regarding the benefit of the Eat Out to Help Out scheme,” said Springboard director Diane Wehrle.

“Although there were rises in footfall on each day between Monday and Wednesday from the week before, it is clear that it was the post 6pm period that yielded the greatest rise in footfall and also that smaller towns benefited more than large city centres.”

Springboard said that footfall across all UK retail destinations remained more than a third lower than in 2019, with a year-on-year decline of 34 percent.

By James Davey

Focus News: UK Shopper Numbers Rise After Launch of State-Funded Dining Scheme

China Sends Fighter Jets as US Health Chief Visits Taiwan

TAIPEI—Chinese air force jets briefly crossed the mid-line of the Taiwan Strait on Monday and were tracked by Taiwanese missiles, Taiwan’s government said, as U.S. health chief Alex Azar visited the island to offer President Donald Trump’s support. Azar arrived in Taiwan on Sunday, the highest-level U.S. official to visit in four decades. China, which claims the island as its own, condemned the visit which comes after a period of sharply deteriorating relations between China and the United States. China, which had promised unspecified retaliation to the trip, flew J-11 and J-10 fighter aircraft briefly onto Taiwan’s side of the sensitive and narrow strait that separates it from its giant neighbour, at around 9 a.m. (01:00 GMT), shortly before Azar met Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen, Taiwan’s air force said. The…