UK manufacturing jump
shows economy ended 2016 strongly despite Brexit vote
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[February 10, 2017]
By William Schomberg and Andy Bruce
LONDON
(Reuters) - British manufacturing grew more strongly than expected in
December, showing the economy remained resilient to the end of the year
despite June's Brexit vote shock, although 2017 looks likely to be more
difficult.
Official data released on Friday also showed the country's smaller
construction sector grew more quickly in December than many economists
had forecast, while the trade deficit narrowed.
Britain's economy was the strongest among the Group of Seven richest
nations last year, confounding predictions of a sharp slowdown following
the decision by voters to leave the European Union. But it is widely
expected to slow this year as rising inflation eats into the spending
power of consumers.
The Bank of England has signaled it is in no hurry to raise interest
rates from their record low.
Sterling rose after Friday's data and British government bond futures
<FLGcv1> modestly extended losses.
"While industrial production and manufacturing output has proved
resilient into the end of 2016, its sustainability over 2017 is in
question," Barclays economists Andrzej Szczepaniak and Fabrice Montagne
said in a note to clients.
They pointed to soaring inflation pressures and the likelihood that
potentially difficult negotiations with the EU will deter companies from
making long-term investments.
British Prime Minister Theresa May is due to launch the process of
leaving the EU by the end of March.
The main driver of Britain's growth since in recent years has been the
dominant services sector.
But Friday's figures showed manufacturing grew strongly in the
October-to-December period, up 1.2 percent from the previous three
months, the strongest performance since June 23's Brexit referendum.
In December, manufacturing output jumped by 2.1 percent, much more than
the 0.5 percent rise forecast by a Reuters poll of economists.
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A car hangs on the wall of Jaguar's Castle Bromwich manufacturing
facility in Birmingham, Britain, November 17, 2016. REUTERS/Darren
Staples
However, the Office for National Statistics said the increase was due in large
part to the often volatile pharmaceuticals sector.
Compared with December 2015, manufacturing was up 4.0 percent, the strongest
increase since April 2014.
Industrial output overall rose 1.1 percent in December, stronger than
expectations for a 0.2 percent increase in the Reuters poll, taking the
year-on-year growth figure to 4.3 percent, the strongest since January 2011.
Britain's construction sector also grew by more than expected, up 1.8 percent in
December from November, helped by the building of houses and commercial
property. The Reuters poll had predicted an increase of 1.0 percent.
The ONS said it was not revising its preliminary estimate that Britain's economy
grew by 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2016.
Separate figures from the ONS showed Britain's goods trade deficit fell to 10.89
billion pounds in December, narrower than a forecast of 11.50 billion pounds in
the Reuters poll.
The ONS said the improvement was largely to due to exports of erratic items such
as gold and aircraft parts and there was little evidence that the fall in the
value of the pound since the Brexit vote was helping bring down the trade gap.
Excluding the volatile erratic items, Britain's goods trade deficit widened in
December.
Exports of British goods in terms of volume rather than value increased 7.1
percent in quarterly terms during December, however - the fastest growth since
mid-2006.
(Writing by William Schomberg, graphics by Jessica Wang,; Editing by Catherine
Evans)
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