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* EXPERTS PREDICT THE UK'S TILLS WILL RING WITH A STAGGERING £2.5MILLION-A-MINUTE SPENT BEFORE DECEMBER 22 * MASK-WEARING SHOPPERS RUSHED TO GET CHRISTMAS ESSENTIALS IN LONDON'S
OXFORD STREET AHEAD OF TIER 4 RULES * THE SCRAMBLE CAME AFTER BORIS JOHNSON YESTERDAY REVEALED THAT A THIRD OF ENGLAND WILL ENTER THE NEW TIER * QUEUES WERE ALSO SEEN FORMING OUTSIDE COSTCO
IN MANCHESTER AS PEOPLE STOCKED UP ON CHRISTMAS ESSENTIALS * NEWCASTLE HIGH STREET WAS JAM-PACKED WITH LOCALS EAGER TO GET THEIR LAST-MINUTE PRESENTS BOUGHT * IN SOUTHAMPTON, TECH-SAVVY
BUYERS QUEUED OUTSIDE CURRYS PC WORLD WHILE KENT MARKETPLACE PUT UP SIGNS By JEMMA CARR and CHRIS JEWERS FOR MAILONLINE Published: 06:54 EDT, 19 December 2020 | Updated: 05:11 EDT, 20
December 2020 High streets descended into chaos on Saturday as shoppers were left with just hours to buy their Christmas gifts before shops close at midnight tonight in London and South
East. The scramble came after Boris Johnson yesterday revealed that a third of England - including London and swathes of the home counties - will be thrust into a brutal 'Tier 4'
lockdown from midnight on Saturday. The draconian bracket will see non-essential shops shut, and travel restrictions including a 'stay at home' order for Christmas Day itself -
even though Mr Johnson insisted just days ago that it would be 'inhuman' to axe five-day festive 'bubbles'. Pictures from Oxford Street in London showed huge crowds of
shoppers flooding the streets to get their last minute purchases in before the introduction of the Tier 4 measures. Meanwhile, Government Minister Michael Gove shocked shoppers after being
spotted laden with bags in London - despite knowing about plans to introduce Tier 4 hours before anyone else. The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster was photographed on Saturday wearing a
face mask while walking with what appeared to be bags from upmarket department store Fortnum and Mason as he passed outside the front of The Ritz on Piccadilly. Experts predict the UK's
tills will ring with a staggering £2.5million-a-minute spent before December 22 as shoppers stack up on last-minute gifts. The announcements came as a hammer blow to many businesses -
particularly retailers hoping to pick up some pre-Christmas sales at the end of a torrid year in which they had faced repeated orders to close. The Confederation of British Industry slammed
the move as 'a real kick in the teeth', claiming many businesses 'were counting on clawing back some lost ground' over the Christmas shopping season. Up to £2 billion
in sales may be lost per week by the new measures, it has been estimated, with the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said that the Government's 'stop-start' approach to
regulations was 'deeply unhelpful'. Saturday also saw mask-wearing shoppers rush to get their Christmas dinner essentials with winding queues forming outside Costco in
Manchester. Meanwhile in Newcastle, the high street was jam-packed with locals eager to get their last-minute presents bought as online shoppers keen to avoid crowded stores put an enormous
strain on postal deliveries. Huge queues formed along the country's high streets and supermarkets yesterday as they stocked up on Christmas essentials - though footfall was down on
last weekend. In Southampton, tech-savvy buyers queued outside Currys PC World while a Kent marketplace put up signs warning pedestrians of the Covid risk in the region. Hundreds of people
were also seen queuing to get into Bluewater on Saturday night. Video footage taken an hour after Boris' announcement showed cars queuing for miles along the A2 to get into the shopping
complex, which lies in one of the areas of the country worst affected by Covid-19. And some described scenes at the mall in Greenhithe in Kent as 'shopmageddon' and 'a
nightmare' while others said it was busier than they had ever seen it. As around 18 million Britons were told they will be put under draconian rules from midnight tonight to stop the
spread of a new mutant superstrain, many made a foolish last minute attempt to purchase gifts. Nowhere was that more apparent than Bluewater, which lies in north Kent, close to the border
with south London, which has seen the emergence of a new virulent strain of Covid in recent weeks. However, experts said there were 2.6 per cent fewer people on shop floors than last
Saturday, with huge drops being seen when compared to the same period last year. Footfall was down more than 35 per cent nationwide than on the same Saturday in 2019, while the drop off was
a massive 70 per cent in Central London. A spokesperson for retail analysts Springboard told MailOnline: 'This is undoubtedly due to the introduction of Tier 3 restrictions across most
of England, as we would have expected footfall to rise on what is the last trading Saturday before Christmas. 'Indeed, in 2015 - the last time that Christmas Day also fell on a Friday
as it does this year - footfall in retail destinations rose by +7.6% up to 12pm on Saturday 19th December. 'The only type of retail destination where footfall was higher on Saturday
than on the previous Saturday were retail parks and only those that comprise mainly homeware and DIY stores. 'In this type of retail park, footfall was +2.9% higher than last week
whilst in parks that are dominated by fashion retailers footfall was -7.9% lower. 'In all other types of destination across the UK, footfall had dropped from the week before. Even in
large shopping centres - which typically are a big draw for shoppers for Christmas shopping as they have the greatest concentration of multiple stores as they have the widest product
offering and are also mainly under cover - footfall was lower than on Saturday 12th December. 'However, it seems that smaller shopping centres have increased in popularity, with
footfall in the smallest shopping centres of less than 100,000 sq ft 9.2% higher than last Saturday. 'This is a strong indicator that shoppers are staying local, which has been a
feature of shopper activity since the start of the first lockdown in March, but undoubtedly exacerbated now due to the widespread Tier 3 restrictions.' Despite there being less
footfall than last week, a relatively big rush yesterday - the last Saturday before Christmas - was a stark contrast to scenes yesterday which saw highstreets nearly deserted on what many
hoped would be a Frenzied Friday shopping spree. Boris Johnson's decision to place London in Tier 3 has decimated trade in the West End with footfall down 25 per cent in a week and
68.5 per cent in a year on one of the busiest shopping days of 2020. Friday's total spending was expected to be around £1.55billion - up by 19 per cent on the equivalent day last year
- despite the dreaded coronavirus crisis trashing the festive season for millions. But while many still braved pouring rain to hit the shops in London, Liverpool, Newcastle, Portsmouth,
Reading, Windsor and Swansea, the number of people shopping compared to a week ago - and the same day in 2019 - is down massively as a total of 38 million people begin life in Tier Three
from Saturday. Coronavirus lockdown rules hammered the UK High Street in November as retail sales dropped by 3.8 per cent when compared to October. Clothing stores were the hardest hit as
sales plummeted by 19 per cent while the sale of fuel also tumbled by 16.6 per cent as families stayed at home. However, online shopping surged by 74.7 per cent year-on-year as businesses
said people had brought forward their Christmas shopping. In central London, put into Tier 3 early this week, the number of people on Oxford Street, Bond Street and other shopping streets
has plummeted, exclusive figures show. Diane Wehrle, Insights Director at Springboard said: 'In Central London footfall declined sharply from the week before by 24.3% following the
imposition of Tier 3 regulations. In regional cities outside London footfall declined by 2.3% due to this reason'. Only visits to shopping centres were up yesterday, when compared to a
week ago, but still down compared to December 18 2019. Ms Wehrle said: 'In shopping centres footfall rose from the previous Friday by 2.5%, which is a trend we expect with shoppers
gravitating to shopping centres in the run up to Christmas as there is the widest choice of products for gifting'. She added: 'The peak Christmas shopping day in each year is
December 23, however this year - due to the five day quarantine holiday that starts on 23rd - we forecast that the peak day will be December 22'. The highstreet figures come as images
of a mountains of post bags at sorting offices spark fears about delayed Christmas presents this season. One image posted on Twitter displayed the huge pile of Royal Mail sacks in Bristol.
A second showed that sorting offices are so inundated that staff are having to stack items outside, putting parcels at risk of being damaged by rain or even stolen. Union bosses are
reporting similar scenes across the country and have described the Christmas delivery chaos as a 'nightmare' after businesses complained parcels were taking up to a month to
arrive. A massive switch to online shopping means there are an estimated 200million more parcels in the postal and courier system this year. Online orders are expected to be up by more than
50 per cent as internet festive shopping overtakes the high street for the first time. The Royal Mail has hired 33,000 temporary staff to help deal with demand. It comes as a scarcity of
online supermarket delivery slots risks sending scores of Christmas dinner plans up in smoke and many Christmas gifts are stuck waiting to arrive in Britain due to chaos at the ports.
Shoppers are desperately scrolling through slot times but finding they are fully booked or will not arrive until after December 25. Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons all confirmed to
MailOnline that they were grappling with a high demand for deliveries amid a festive rush. Meanwhile delays with Christmas presents are threatening to ruin Christmas for families and
businesses. Many customers have complained about items arriving late, while John Lewis, Boots and HMV have blamed Royal Mail for delivery delays. Terry Pullinger, of the Communication
Workers Union, said: 'We could not possibly have anticipated this level of packets and parcels, it seems to be intensifying every day. 'That coupled with the arrangements that are
going to be in place to keep key workers safe because of Covid, and the rising spread of Covid, is complicating what is already a strategic nightmare.' Ian Trehearne, branch secretary
for Gloucestershire, said sorting offices have been 'flooded' and had been 'under the cosh' without let up since April.