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Whether or not crowds will be smaller or if sales will be down is yet to be seen. But a recent survey of shoppers done by Deloitte gives a small hint: As many as 38% of shoppers plan to spend less money, partly out of concern for economic stability and a desire to save more. And while people feel more comfortable shopping online, according to the survey, they will probably spend about 7% less this year per household..

OurPrivacy Noticeexplains more about how we use your data, and your rights. You can unsubscribe at any time.Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy noticeAll passengers who fly into Scotland must enter quarantine hotels from next week under tough new rules intended to go further than the rest of the UK.Scottish transport secretary Michael Matheson said arrivals will be expected to pay 1,750 in advance to cover the costs of their isolation and testing.Six hotels near Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen airports with a total capacity of 1,300 will be used to quarantine passengers for a period of 10 days at a time as of February 15.The rooms must be booked and paid for via a central UK Government online portal, due to go live on Thursday.Elite sportspeople are among those exempted from the rules, but there will be increased restrictions on overseas training camps.The Scottish Government has taken a tougher line than Westminster on international arrivals. Under the UK Government plan, only passengers arriving from the most at risk “red list” countries will be expected to enter quarantine hotels.Read MoreNicola Sturgeon in vaccine scam warning as Scots targeted by criminalsMatheson told MSPs that UK Government plans did not go far enough due to the speed at which new variants of coronavirus developed.But he added there was not yet an agreed plan between Holyrood and Westminster on how to stop passengers arriving in England from simply crossing the border into Scotland.He said: “We need a comprehensive approach to restricting international travel.”But the SNP minister warned the UK Government continued to rely on a “targeted, reactive approach” insisting this was “no longer sufficient” in the face of the threat from coronavirus.He continued: “That advice is clear we need a comprehensive approach to restricting international travel.”Matheson said it was “very hard to say with confidence where the high risk countries are”, saying this was why the Scottish Government wanted a “comprehensive approach to managed isolation”.And he stated: “From Monday we will require all international travellers arriving directly on flights into Scotland to enter managed isolation.”He said this went further than the measures announced by UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock, where this approach will only be used for travellers arriving from “red list countries”.But Matheson said: “We know that is not sufficient and we have therefore gone further.”The new restrictions are likely to reduce the number of people flying into Scotland further.The transport secretary revealed that in the last week of January there were approximately 1,600 people who arrived in Scotland from overseas but that this fell to 730 in the first week of February..