Fragile UK economy set to dodge recession for now
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[July 13, 2023] By
Andy Bruce and William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) -Britain's economy shrank by less than expected in May
despite a bank holiday to mark King Charles' coronation and strikes,
suggesting a widely forecast recession caused by high inflation and
surging interest rates was not already under way.
Economic output fell 0.1% in May from April, the Office for National
Statistics (ONS) said, after growth of 0.2% in the previous month. A
Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a contraction of 0.3% in May.
All sectors of the economy contracted with the exception of services,
which showed no growth. The pound rose modestly against the dollar on
the back of the data.
Business groups said the big picture of a tepid economy remained, albeit
one with stubborn inflationary pressures that means the Bank of England
is likely to raise interest rates further in early August.
Britain's economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has lagged most
of its peers among major advanced economies, with only recession-hit
Germany having fared as badly as of the first quarter of this year.
"Our sense is that underlying activity is still growing, albeit at a
snail's pace," Paul Dales, chief UK economist with Capital Economics,
said.
The economy was on track to expand by around 0.1% in the second quarter,
a touch stronger than the BoE's forecast of no change but it was likely
to suffer a mild recession later in the year, Dales said.
Next Wednesday's inflation release would probably determine whether the
BoE raises rates by another half percentage point or slows down the pace
to a quarter-point hike, Dales added.
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Union flag bunting and a picture of
Britain's King Charles III hang on railings on The Mall in central
London on May 6, 2023, during the coronations of Britain's King
Charles III and Britain's Queen Camilla. ADRIAN DENNIS/Pool via
REUTERS
Finance minister Jeremy Hunt said high inflation continued to hamper
the economy and he called for patience in bringing it down. "Our
plan will work, but we must stick to it," he said.
Some companies in the arts, entertainment and recreation sector said
they had benefited from the extra bank holiday, as well as hotels
and restaurants, the ONS said.
But there were signs that strikes in the health, rail and education
sectors had dragged on output.
The ONS said anything better than a 0.1% drop in economic output for
June would put the economy on track to avoid a contraction for the
second quarter as a whole.
Britain's economy often shows some rebound in subsequent months when
output is temporarily dented by extra bank holidays.
Separate ONS data showed Britain's trade-in-goods deficit widened by
more than expected to 18.7 billion pounds in May, with exports to
the European Union falling to their lowest level since January 2022.
(Reporting by Andy Bruce and William SchombergEditing by Kate
Holton, Peter Graff and Toby Chopra)
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