Central high streets and shopping centres have shed workers at a significantly sharper rate than out-of-town retail parks over the past decade, according to latest Office for National Statistics analysis.
The retail sector across the United Kingdom has undergone a dramatic transformation between 2015 and 2024, with employment losses concentrated heavily in traditional town and city centre shopping areas. According to data from the Office for National Statistics, retail employment in central high streets and shopping centres has fallen at a noticeably steeper rate than employment in non-central retail locations and retail parks during this nine-year period.
This divergence reflects a broader structural shift in how British consumers shop and where retailers choose to locate their operations. The trend highlights the accelerating decline of traditional high street retail, driven by the continued expansion of online shopping, out-of-town retail developments, and changing consumer behaviour in the years following the 2015 baseline.
Understanding the retail landscape shiftThe distinction between central and non-central retail locations is crucial to understanding modern retail employment patterns. Central high streets typically refer to traditional shopping areas in town and city centres, whilst shopping centres encompass indoor malls and covered shopping precincts. Non-central high streets and retail parks, by contrast, include out-of-town locations, supermarket-anchored retail parks, and shopping facilities situated away from traditional town and city centres.
The differential rate of job losses between these categories suggests that the structural changes affecting British retail have been far from uniform. Whilst the sector overall has faced headwinds, those employment losses have been concentrated disproportionately in locations that were already struggling with footfall and consumer spending changes.
Broader context for UK retail employmentThe overall picture of retail employment in the United Kingdom shows significant long-term contraction. The wholesale and retail sector employed approximately 3.68 million people in the fourth quarter of 2024, compared with 4.1 million in the first quarter of 2000. This represents a substantial decline over more than two decades, though the most dramatic shifts have occurred in recent years.
The 2015 to 2024 period captured by the ONS analysis encompasses several critical developments for the sector. This timeframe includes the growing maturity of online retail as a mainstream shopping channel, the continued effects of business rate pressures on physical retail spaces, and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on consumer behaviour and retailer operations. More recently, retailers have faced additional pressures from inflation, rising energy costs, and changes in consumer spending patterns.
Why central locations have been hit hardestThe sharper employment losses in central high streets and shopping centres compared to retail parks reflect several interconnected factors. Retail parks and out-of-town locations typically anchor larger superstores and discount retailers which have proven more resilient to online competition. These locations also benefit from lower operational costs compared to premium central locations, where rents, business rates, and staffing costs tend to be substantially higher.
Traditional high street retailers, particularly smaller independent shops and specialist retailers, have faced mounting pressure from online competitors who can operate with lower cost structures and wider geographical reach. Shopping centres, which rely on attracting sustained footfall and driving dwell time, have similarly suffered as consumers increasingly redirect spending to digital channels.
Employment implications and regional considerationsFor workers in retail, this employment shift carries significant implications. Central retail locations tend to employ higher proportions of part-time and casual workers, and these roles typically offer fewer progression opportunities than management or head office positions often located in major city centres. The concentration of job losses in central areas means that many smaller towns and city centres have experienced above-average employment reductions.
What This Means for Kent ResidentsFor Kent workers and businesses, this retail employment trend carries direct relevance to local economic health and high street viability. Significant retail employment centres in Kent, including Canterbury, Maidstone, and Thanet’s town centres, are subject to the same structural forces documented in the ONS analysis. Local retailers and town centre managers across the county have reported ongoing challenges with maintaining footfall and sustaining retail employment.
The data underscores the importance of local economic diversification strategies. Many Kent town centres are exploring mixed-use developments, hospitality expansion, and alternative attractions to compensate for traditional retail employment losses. For Kent residents seeking retail employment, opportunities increasingly lie in distribution and logistics roles supporting online retail, typically located in strategic locations with motorway access such as those near junction 7 of the M25 or along the M20 corridor, rather than in traditional high street positions.
Source: @ONS
Key Takeaways
- Retail employment in central high streets and shopping centres declined more sharply between 2015 and 2024 than in retail parks and non-central retail locations
- The overall UK retail sector employed 3.68 million people in late 2024, down significantly from historical levels, reflecting decades of structural change
- The differential employment losses reflect wider shifts in consumer behaviour, the expansion of online retail, and economic pressures on traditional retail locations


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