Leisure and Recreation Market

Released on = April 16, 2007, 2:28 am

Press Release Author = Bharat Book Bureau

Industry = Marketing

Press Release Summary = Leisure time is more important than ever before. It is
increasingly likely that both partners in a household are working full time;
commuting adds to the burden of the daily routine, whether to school or to work.

Press Release Body =
Leisure & Recreation Market

Leisure time is more important than ever before. It is increasingly likely that both
partners in a household are working full time; commuting adds to the burden of the
daily routine, whether to school or to work. There is also the increasing danger of
sedentary occupations, producing the demand for active leisure or `recreation\'. More
working time is spent every year sitting in front of a computer terminal or on the
telephone, followed by driving home or sitting in a train. At home, the temptation
is greater than ever before to sit in front of the widescreen television, with its
superb picture and sound, or to spend hours on the Internet or playing electronic
games.

To satisfy the demand for activities that break into the sedentary pattern, there is
a vast range available both inside and outside the home. In total, the leisure and
recreation market as defined by this Market Review involved consumer spending of
£83.93bn in 2004, which gave leisure and recreation an 11.5% share of all UK
consumer spending. This share has not been increasing, although the trends for each
type of leisure activity vary widely. The largest markets in 2004 were:

-eating out and drinking out
-home viewing, covering both goods and services (television sets, Sky subscriptions,
the Licence Fee, etc.)
-DIY and gardening goods
-gambling (including the National Lottery).
-Other, smaller leisure markets include reading, home computing and electronic
games, sport and exercise, home listening and commercial entertainment or culture
outside the home, including cinemas.

Of course, financial expenditure is not the only factor influencing leisure and
recreational choices; they are also affected by the amount of leisure time available
and how consumers choose to `spend\' that time. Research carried out by BMRB Access
on behalf of Key Note in July 2005, revealed that watching television, video
cassettes (VCs) or digital versatile discs (DVDs) retained its place as the dominant
leisure activity both at weekends and in the evenings.

83% of adults claim to enjoy watching `the box\' as a leisure activity on the average
evening. Other popular activities that consume time but which do not cost the
consumer very much include `reading a good book\' and `listening to music or the
radio\'.

These same activities are also the most popular at weekends, but weekend leisure is
increasingly likely to involve `entertaining others at home\', indicating the trend
towards `cocooning\' within the home for many families, although `going to the pub\'
is still popular. There are clear divisions in leisure by age group, with pub-going,
cinema and concerts preferred by the young, while older consumers enjoy reading,
gardening and DIY.

The supply side of leisure markets features a mixture of subsidised activities - for
example, the Government and local authorities encourage cultural participation and
exercise - alongside commercial operators, such as the owners of chains of pubs and
restaurants, cinemas and bookmakers. Most companies are now specialised, rather than
attempting to own more than one leisure subsidiary. This means that the supply side
is highly fragmented by sector, although the media markets still feature some
multinational conglomerates, such as Rupert Murdoch\'s News Corporation, Time Warner
and Sony.

Prospects in 2005 are not especially promising, owing to the weakening of the UK
economy, with the likelihood that `belt-tightening\' by consumers will increase with
regard to the more frivolous items of household spending. Key Note forecasts that
total growth over the 5 years from 2005 to 2009 will not match the growth achieved
over the previous 5 years (2000 to 2004). Growth will be led by the home
computing/electronic games and gambling markets, while home listening will struggle.


Web Site = www.bharatbook.com

Contact Details = 207, Hermes Atrium,
Sector 11, Plot No.57
CBD Belapur

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