The Confederation of British Industry's
industrial orders balance - measuring the proportion of firms
reporting order volumes above or below normal - rose to +17 from
-8 in April.
Overall output growth over the past three months was the highest
since December 2018 and represented the first material growth in
almost two years, the CBI said.
"The industrial sector is booming ... for now," Samuel Tombs,
economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said.
Export orders lagged behind domestic demand, which Tombs said
reflected new post-Brexit trade barriers. Demand for goods was
also likely to soften later in 2021 as spending shifted more
towards services as the economy reopened.
Official data for March released last week showed factory output
was 2% below its level in February 2020, before Britain went
into its first COVID lockdown which caused output to slump
briefly by 30%.
Other surveys of manufacturers, such as the monthly Purchasing
Managers' Index, have also pointed to strong growth. April's PMI
showed the biggest rise in new orders since November 2013.
However, the pandemic is still having a knock-on impact on
global supply chains, with shortages of everything from
micro-chips to building supplies. Last month carmaker Jaguar
Land Rover temporarily stopped production at two factories in
Britain due to a lack of semi-conductors.
"Firms are still feeling the chill as supply shortages fuel cost
pressures, reflected in expectations for strong output price
inflation in the coming quarter," CBI economist Anna Leach said.
The survey's price balance rose to its highest since January
2018 at +38 in May, up from April's +27 and well above its
average of +3.
(Reporting by David MillikenEditing by William Schomberg)
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