Skip to main content

UK economy shrank by a grater rate.

UK economy shrank

 A recession by the end of the year is even more likely after statisticians said the economy shrank by more than initially thought in the third quarter.

The Office for National Statistics revised its figure for growth in gross domestic product, the primary measure of output, to a contraction of 0.3 per cent in three months to September. Its original estimate was for a 0.2 per cent contraction.

The change for its final reading of GDP for the quarter reflects downgrades to the statistics office’s production and construction output estimates.

Darren Morgan, director of economic statistics at the ONS, said: «Our revised figures show the economy performed slightly less well over the last year than we previously estimated, with manufacturing and electricity generation notably weaker. As a result, household incomes continued to fall in real terms, albeit at a slower rate than in the previous two quarters, while household spending fell for the first time since the final Covid-19 lockdown in the spring of 2021».

Households have faced a deterioration in the value of their pay packets over the past year because of inflation. The ONS said households’ disposable income dropped by 0.5 per cent in the third quarter, marking the fourth consecutive quarter of decline.

The UK is expected to meet the criteria for a formal recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth, by the end of the year. Figures for the final quarter, which covers October to December, will be published by the statistics office in February.

The latest official estimates, published last week, show that the economy grew by 0.5 per cent in October. Still, economists believe the brief return to growth is unlikely to stop Britain from sinking into recession this winter.

The main driver is inflation, which, at its highest level in decades, has squeezed household budgets and weakened demand for goods and services.

Gabriella Dickens, a senior UK economist at the Pantheon Macroeconomics consultancy, said the figures showed that the UK would continue to underperform compared with the rest of the G7, which includes the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan.

«The national accounts confirm that the UK was the only G7 economy in which Q3 GDP still was below its pre-Covid level,» she said. «The expenditure breakdown, meanwhile, shows that the UK’s underperformance largely reflects weakness in households’ real spending, which was 3.2 per cent lower in Q3 than in Q4 2019, compared to an unweighted average increase of 1.6 per cent across the other G7 economies».

Dickens said that household spending had been subdued in Britain because of the relatively muted recovery in employment and more considerable price increases and that households in Britain have been less willing to reduce their saving rate than those overseas.

www.sba.tax

Comments

  1. It was expected. 0.2 per cent was a very optimistic contraction estimate. I and many others knew that this number would be higher. It can be felt in the market.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Cloud Bookkeeping

HS2 cost cuts new routes and add delays.

 Trans­port depart­ment offi­cials have begun work on «Project Sil­ver­light» sug­gest­ing the high­speed rail scheme might face four addi­tional years of delay. The planned High Speed 2 rail line faces fur­ther delays of up to four years and more cuts to the project under plans being drawn up by min­is­ters to rein in its bal­loon­ing costs. The extra delays to the coun­try’s biggest infra­struc­ture project would mean that it would not be com­pleted until as late as 2045 — 12 years after ori­gin­ally planned. «This is a func­tion of infla­tion; we are hav­ing to find huge sav­ings because the cost of everything the depart­ment is already doing will have become so much more expens­ive by then,» said one gov­ern­ment offi­cial. In Octo­ber, the FT repor­ted that the Treas­ury had asked HS2’s man­age­ment team to identify poten­tial cuts or «scope reduc­tions» to the high-speed line. Trans­port depart­ment offi­cials have sub­sequently begun work on Project Sil­ver­light aimed at fi...

Small business will be excluded from fraud law.

  Min­is­ters are plan­ning to exclude small busi­nesses from anti-fraud legis­la­tion by nar­row­ing the scope of a crim­inal offence tar­get­ing com­pan­ies that fail to pre­vent eco­nomic crimes. MPs and anti-cor­rup­tion cam­paign­ers had hoped the gov­ern­ment would seek to amend the eco­nomic crime and cor­por­ate trans­par­ency bill to ensure the new offence covered all com­pan­ies. The plans to limit the scope of the amend­ments will also dis­ap­point those who had hoped the legis­la­tion would remove key hurdles to the pro­sec­u­tion of white-col­lar crime. A new «fail­ure to pre­vent» offence for fraud would bring it in line with exist­ing sim­ilar cor­por­ate offences for bribery and tax eva­sion. At present, pro­sec­utors need only prove that organ­isa­tions lacked «reas­on­able» or «adequate» con­trols to pur­sue the offence in bribery and tax eva­sion cases. «It would be much more sens­ible for the gov­ern­ment to provide strong guid­ance for SMEs on what these pro­ce...

Doubt on CS's collateral.

  Credit Suisse provided an emergency $140mn loan to Greensill Capital based partly on invoices to companies that deny ever doing the business stated on the documents. The Swiss bank provided the loan in October 2020, less than five months before the collapse of Greensill, a supply chain finance firm that counted former British prime minister David Cameron as a senior adviser. Invoices issued by metals magnate Sanjeev Gupta’s Liberty Commodities and sold to Greensill formed part of the collateral for the loan, according to documents seen by the Financial Times and people familiar with the transaction. Yet several of the parties named on the invoices have told the FT they did no business with Liberty. GFG has consistently denied any wrongdoing. Credit Suisse’s loan had a clause dictating that the collateral value had to be equal to or greater than the $140mn borrowed. The terms of the debt agreement only allowed invoices on Green-sill’s balance sheet to count towards this tally if t...