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Parents Still Spending On Kids – despite credit crunch
Home :: Home :: Home Improvement
By: Chris Lusty Email Article
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Households across the UK may be tightening their belts as the credit crunch begins to bite and rising prices hit the family purse strings, but parents are still prepared to splash the cash on the kids.

That’s the view of one of the UK’s leading retailers of children's furniture, which is experiencing a double digit sales growth in 2008, at a time when other retailers are bearing the brunt of the downturn in consumer spending.

Aspace, an online children's furniture store, is bucking the trend in retail and puts its fortunes down to the fact that it sells products for children rather than being a furniture retailer.

It may only seem to be a case of semantics but there is a massive gulf between the two, according to managing director, Paul Cunningham.

"As a business we have kept a very close eye on factors which are having an impact on market sector, as well as the wider economy, and it is clear that there is a huge difference between the purchase motives for the different types of furniture," he said.

"We have studied the data and the main conclusion that we have drawn is that parents will, within reason, cut back on a number of purchases but not ones which affect their children. The idea is not as crazy as it first seems because all our research and data points to the fact that parents would much rather forego a new sofa, bedroom furniture or a dining room suite because they are prepared to make do with what they’ve got.

"In those terms, there is a certain logic to the argument which does help to explain why www.aspace.co.uk is seeing business growth this year."

Cunningham believes that his company’s current trading situation fits into a widely accepted business wisdom which says that there is a natural sequence in which retailers begin to suffer at times of economic downturn.

According to such wisdom, it is believed that furniture retailers are the first to be hit. Then it’s men’s fashion followed by women’s. And only then, when a recession kicks in, does spending on children and food begin to drop away.

A number of leading business figures have alluded to this cycle recently, said Cunningham, and he is convinced that his company is seeing this effect at first hand.

"It has been gratifying to see business leaders confirming what we are seeing in our business," he said.

"And given the fact that things are slowing down, this often presents its own opportunities. Just look at the housing market for example. Whilst the housing market is a nightmare for the poor souls who need to buy or sell at the moment, the rising number of ‘stay-put homeowners’ is stimulating a number of different markets, including ours.

"Rather than losing thousands on the property market, many homeowners are opting to ride out the storm and stay where they are. And because they are staying put, they are spending a few pounds on their home to spruce it up. They might choose to make cosmetic changes in areas such as kitchens or living rooms but in areas like children’s bedrooms they are tending to go for a more significant overhaul including new furniture."

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Christopher Lusty MA has more than 20 years industrial and product design experience in cots, nursery furniture and children’s beds and furniture. He is involved in the development of safety standards in nursery/children’s furniture.

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