We have become frugal and this, together with growing online purchasing overseas, is hammering the local retail industry.
DESPITE record low prices for many electrical goods and gadgets, despite falling grocery prices, despite reasonably strong wage growth and strong employment, we've stopped spending. Big time.
David Jones has a clearance sale beginning this week, Myer has a winter sale that finishes today, walk down the high street in any town and you will see discounts - a sign of an industry in distress.
The major retailers launch sale after sale but it has little impact on our cautious stance. We want absolute bargains, or we are not spending at all.
In addition, the surge in the $A is taking more of what money we are prepared to spend offshore as we get more confident shopping online and are growing to like it and the flexibility it offers. After all, why shouldn't we benefit from our surging currency?
While statistics show we still prefer to spend online with local companies, this is rapidly changing as more of us check out overseas bargains and are successful in the online transaction. Plus, offshore online retailers such as Amazon are offering free shipping to Australia once you spend over certain levels, or free shipping regardless.
Retail sales figures for April are due out this week and may show a small lift after a fall in March, economists say, but overall retail spending is running at around a 2.5 per cent annual growth rate, pretty much the same as inflation. That's unheard of in an industry used to sales growth three times that rate.
Margy Osmond, chief executive of the Australian National Retailers Association (ANRA), says local retailers are under siege.
"Things are grim," she says. "The definition of confidence has changed - it used to mean that people were happy to spend, but now, if they are feeling fairly chipper and they've got a job, they still sit on the money. We've got a historically cautious shopper - frugal is the new black, saving is the fashionable thing to do and being a bargain hunter is almost a badge of honour."
Brian Redican, senior economist at Macquarie Bank, says consumer spending patterns have changed.
"The baby boomers, who are the ones with the capacity to spend, are rebuilding their savings and nest eggs ahead of retirement after getting scared following the impact of the global financial crisis, while the younger generations have been hit by rising electricity bills, rising water bills, rising housing costs - they are under the pump."
But Mr Redican says that even if consumers change their stance, the Reserve Bank will cut them off at the pass and aggressively lift interest rates to stop them spending anyway. "By hook or by crook it will be a tough year for the retail sector," he says.
Deutsche Bank senior economist Phil O'Donaghoe agrees. "Household savings are running at a 9.8 per cent rate; you have to go back to the 1980s to get a comparable rate.
"While I think this savings rate is as high as it will get, as soon as the household sector starts to spend, the Reserve Bank will stop it by lifting interest rates. Business investment, driven by the miners, is a long way above normal and if the household sector joins that, we will have a significant threat to inflation."
On this basis, the retail sector will struggle while the mining boom continues, says Mr O'Donaghoe. "There's a very simple two speed economy right there."
The retail stocks are showing it too. Myer hit a record low of $2.77 last Tuesday well off its float price of $4.10 of 18 months ago. Former stockmarket favourite JB Hi-Fi hit a 12-month low of $16.33 last week too, and David Jones and Harvey Norman are near similar levels.
Then we had news early last week that James Packer was part of a consortium spending $80 million for a 40 per cent stake in online daily deals websites 'Catch of the Day' and 'Scoopon', his second major online retailing investment in as many months. There are signs of big changes there.
ANRA's Ms Osmond says online retailing, while not huge yet in Australia, is starting to impact the High St retailers. "It's got legs and heading in an upward trend," she says.
But she has a warning: "Remember if you are buying online from overseas, it's difficult to return goods, and the consumer protection that everyone is used to here, doesn't apply to overseas retailers. I expect we will soon see some stories emerge of less-than-happy experiences in that space."