UK economy slumps by record 10% in 2020 after COVID hit
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[February 12, 2021]
By David Milliken and William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's coronavirus-ravaged
economy suffered its biggest crash in output in more than 300 years in
2020 when it slumped by 9.9%, but it avoided heading back towards
recession at the end of the year and looks on course for a recovery in
2021.
Official figures showed gross domestic product (GDP) grew 1.0% from
October through December, the top of a range of economists' forecasts in
a Reuters poll.
This makes it likely that Britain will escape two straight quarters of
contraction - the standard definition of recession in Europe - even
though the economy is set to shrink in early 2021 due to the effects of
a third COVID lockdown.
"As and when restrictions are eased, we continue to expect a vigorous
rebound in the economy," said Dean Turner, an economist at UBS Global
Wealth Management.
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Britain's economy grew 1.2% in December alone, after a 2.3% fall in
output in November when there was a partial lockdown, pointing to
greater resilience to COVID restrictions than at the start of the
pandemic.
That left output 6.3% lower than in February before the start of the
pandemic, the Office for National Statistics said.
However, the Bank of England forecasts the economy will shrink by 4% in
the first three months of 2021 because of the new lockdown and Brexit
disruption.
It thinks it will take until early 2022 before GDP regains its pre-COVID
size, assuming vaccination continues at the current rapid pace, which
outstrips the rest of Europe's. Many economists think recovery will take
longer.
"Today's figures show that the economy has experienced a serious shock
as a result of the pandemic, which has been felt by countries around the
world," finance minister Rishi Sunak said.
Sunak, facing the heaviest borrowing since World War Two, said he would
continue to focus on protecting jobs when he sets out a new annual
budget on March 3.
Unemployment has risen much less than feared at the start of the crisis,
largely due to subsidies to keep people in work, though sectors such as
hospitality and high-street retail remain hard hit.
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A person walks past a closed shopfront on Oxford Street, as official
figures are published for UK GDP in 2020, London, Britain, February
12, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville
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HARDER HIT THAN MOST
Last year's fall in output was the biggest since modern official
records began after World War Two. Longer-running historical data
hosted by the Bank of England suggest it was the biggest drop since
1709, when Britain suffered a "Great Frost".
Britain has reported Europe's highest death toll from COVID-19 and
is among the world's highest in terms of deaths per head.
The GDP fall is steeper than almost any other big economy's, though
Spain - also hard-hit by the virus - suffered an 11% decline.
Some of the damage reflects how Britain's economy relies more on
face-to-face consumer services than other countries, as well as
disruption to schooling and routine healthcare, which few other
countries factored in to GDP.
Sunak, in an interview with Sky News, said Britain's economic
performance could be seen as being marginally above that of some of
its peers last year.
GDP is almost always compared on a "real" or inflation-adjusted
basis, which shows Britain was the worst performer in the Group of
Seven large advanced economies. But Sunak said Britain did better on
a "nominal" basis, which ignores inflation.
Taking this approach, Britain's economy is closer to its pre-crisis
size than Germany, France or Italy's, according to figures provided
by the ONS, which said it "may be useful" to look at nominal as well
as real measures of GDP.
But most international differences on inflation adjustment centre on
government spending, and looking at household spending alone,
Britain remains a laggard. Household spending in the fourth quarter
was 8.4% below pre-crisis levels, compared with a 2.6% shortfall in
the United States and 6.8% in France.
"The UK's underperformance can't simply be attributed to the
different way the ONS measures government expenditure to most other
countries," said Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics.
(Writing by David Milliken; editing by Willian Schomberg, Guy
Faulconbridge, Raissa Kasolowsky, Larry King)
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