The
figures are not seasonally adjusted, and the ONS said some of
the increase was driven by end-of-month spending on households
bills and food shopping.
But they add to signs that the economy is beginning to pick up
as coronavirus restrictions being to ease following the roll-out
of vaccines to more than half of Britain's adult population.
Payment processor Barclaycard said on Wednesday that spending at
golf courses jumped five-fold last week after they reopened to
the public, and also reported more contactless payments which it
linked to people buying picnic supplies.
Construction activity last month recorded its biggest jump since
2014, as businesses restarted mothballed projects in
anticipation of shops, pubs and restaurants reopening next week,
and recruiters reported the biggest increase in hiring of
permanent staff in six years.
This week the International Monetary Fund revived up its growth
forecast for Britain this year to 5.3%, but it does not see
Britain's economy recovering its pre-crisis size until next
year, much slower than the U.S. and Japanese economies.
The Bank of England expects rapid initial growth but has warned
that there could be a long overhang of unemployment and
underemployment after government support is withdrawn.
The ONS said firms reported that 19% of businesses' staff were
on furlough in mid March. This is equivalent to 6 million people
and well above levels of 11% in early December, before COVID
restrictions were tightened to slow the spread of a more
infectious variant of the disease.
Some 75.1% of businesses replying to the ONS survey said that
they were currently trading as of April 4, up 1.3 percentage
points from the previous two-week period, while 22.2% of firms
said they were closed temporarily.
(Reporting by David Milliken, editing by Andy Bruce)
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