How has the new tax on plastic carrier bags affected your shopping habits?
Jennifer Lermarinal, 25, trainee actuary, Cardiff
“I don’t do big trips to Crwys and City Road anymore. If I did that, I wouldn’t be able to carry everything home without having to buy yet more bags for life.”
Gwyn Leeds, 45, interpreter, Cardiff
“I don’t think our shopping habits have changed. I think that we’re more organised and take bags for life out with us, only buying extra carriers in shops if we absolutely have to.”
Ben Keverne, 28, quarry manager, Cardiff
“I’ll get a bag from the first shop I go in and use that as I go. It’s quite good to use that as a limiting factor too. If I haven’t had to buy a second bag, that means I’ve not spent too much money!”
Anna Harris, 24, artist, Cardiff
“I stuff what I can into my handbag now, because I don’t want to keep buying carrier bags. I shop in local shops less, and use my car to drive to supermarkets so that I can take boxes and large bags for life with me.’
James Harding, 21, retail assistant, Cardiff
“I haven’t changed how I shop. But, I work in retail and we’ve seen the number of shoplifting incidents rise since the bag tax came in, as its difficult to identify who’s bought what from where?”
David Small, 48, communications manager, Bridgend
“I have found myself buying little and often. That way I don’t need a carrier bag at all. The idea of always having a bag with me is a nuisance, so I generally buy single items as and when I need them, or go to the supermarket in my car.”
Growing concern for local businesses following the tax on carriers
Although praise has befallen Wales’ initiative to introduce a compulsory charge of five pence for a single-use carrier bag, small businesses are concerned about the knock-on effects that it has had on local trade.
This new legislation is undoubtedly an environmental step forward for Wales, yet some businesses have experienced adverse effects as a direct consequence of it. Indeed, the accompanying vox-populi suggests that some Cardiff residents have scaled-down the size of shopping trips in a bid to save on costly carrier bags.
Lyndon Jewkes is the owner of Central Paper, a Cardiff-based company that supplies shops with polythene bags. He said, “My profit has fallen 40% since the tax on carriers began, with little advice from the Welsh Assembly on how to adapt to consumers’ new shopping habits”.
How has the new tax on plastic carrier bags affected your shopping habits?
Jennifer Lermarinal, 25, trainee actuary, Cardiff
“I don’t do big trips to Crwys and City Road anymore. If I did that, I wouldn’t be able to carry everything home without having to buy yet more bags for life.”
Gwyn Leeds, 45, interpreter, Cardiff
“I don’t think our shopping habits have changed. I think that we’re more organised and take bags for life out with us, only buying extra carriers in shops if we absolutely have to.”
Ben Keverne, 28, quarry manager, Cardiff
“I’ll get a bag from the first shop I go in and use that as I go. It’s quite good to use that as a limiting factor too. If I haven’t had to buy a second bag, that means I’ve not spent too much money!”
Anna Harris, 24, artist, Cardiff
“I stuff what I can into my handbag now, because I don’t want to keep buying carrier bags. I shop in local shops less, and use my car to drive to supermarkets so that I can take boxes and large bags for life with me.’
James Harding, 21, retail assistant, Cardiff
“I haven’t changed how I shop. But, I work in retail and we’ve seen the number of shoplifting incidents rise since the bag tax came in, as its difficult to identify who’s bought what from where?”
David Small, 48, communications manager, Bridgend
“I have found myself buying little and often. That way I don’t need a carrier bag at all. The idea of always having a bag with me is a nuisance, so I generally buy single items as and when I need them, or go to the supermarket in my car.”