Last in line: An assessment of consumer protection in the event of retailer insolvency

Prepayments form a significant part of the retail economy.  We routinely pay for a wide range of goods, from theatre tickets to furniture, weeks or even months in advance of receiving them.  An estimated 24.5 million prepayments were made by 20 million customers in 2009. There is good reason to believe that this number has increased significantly since then, in part due to the rise of e-commerce.  Three quarters of UK adults bought or sold goods and services on the internet in 2014, up from 53 per cent in 2008 - the vast majority of which will have been paid for in advance.

Prepayments offer clear benefits for traders in the form of guaranteed payment and valuable cash flow, particularly when trading in high value goods. In the vast majority of cases people who have paid for goods or services in advance do not encounter a problem.  But what happens when things go wrong?  

In Last in line 580 KB we use our unique evidence, gathered from across the Citizens Advice Service, to explore the consumer experience of prepayments and retailer insolvency.  

In the first section we explore the political and legal context before setting out the findings of an analysis of 1,380enquiries to the Consumer Helpline in relation to eight high profile retailer insolvencies in section two. We find that although retailer insolvencies are relatively rare, the financial and emotional impact for individual consumers can be severe.  We also identify three problem areas ripe for reform:

  • First, there is a significant gap between consumers’ expectations and understanding of ‘fairness’ and the legal status and rights they are afforded in practice under insolvency law, leading to a strong sense of injustice among affected consumers.

  • Second, the information given to consumers in the days and weeks after a retailer becomes insolvent is often incomplete and inconsistent. This makes it difficult for consumers to establish a clear picture of the routes to redress open to them and the steps they need to take to access them

  • Finally, access to redress is not consistent across payment methods, leaving consumers that pay by cash, who are often those least able to to absorb financial shocks, at increased risk of finding themselves out of pocket.

In the third and final section we weigh up the arguments and identify four key opportunities for aligning consumer protections more closely with consumer expectations significantly out of kilter with general principles of consumer rights:

  1. Moving consumers up the hierarchy of creditors to the status of preferential creditors

  2. Encouraging retailers to take steps to protect consumer prepayments

  3. Greater clarity on the transfer of legal ownership of goods

  4. Clear, consistent information and a single point of contact for consumers in cases of retailer insolvency.

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