UK Treasury chief says she's not satisfied by paltry third-quarter
economic growth
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[November 15, 2024] By
PAN PYLAS
LONDON (AP) — Britain's Treasury chief Rachel Reeves said Friday that
she is “not satisfied” by official figures showing the British economy's
rebound from recession slowed down sharply in the third quarter of the
year, with most sectors stagnating.
The Office for National Statistics said growth during the July to
September period was just 0.1%. That was lower than the 0.5% recorded in
the previous three-month period and below market expectations for 0.2%.
The statistics agency said overall output in September actually shrank,
a development that has further fueled accusations from critics of the
new Labour government that its pessimism dragged the economy down in its
first few weeks in office.
On coming to power in July for the first time in 14 years, the
government described its economic inheritance from the former
Conservative administration as the bleakest in decades, requiring urgent
action to fix the public finances. The Conservatives' Treasury
spokesperson, Mel Stride, sought to pin the blame for the slowdown on
the new government, saying the deterioration in business and consumer
confidence was a direct result of it “talking the economy down."
Reeves used the budget to raise taxes sharply, mainly on business, as
well as increasing spending on public services, such as the state-run
National Health Service, and borrowing on investments.
“Improving economic growth is at the heart of everything I am seeking to
achieve, which is why I am not satisfied with these numbers,” Reeves
said following Friday's figures.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said raising economic growth his
government's number one priority over the next five years. Since the
global financial crisis in 2008-9, the British economy has
underperformed relative to previous years and actually slipped into a
modest recession in 2023.
The Resolution Foundation think tank said the British economy has been a
“rollercoaster” over the past year and that its medium-term performance
has been “staid and stagnant”
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Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves delivers her first Mansion
House speech on financial services in the City of London, during the
Financial and Professional Services Dinner, in the Egyptian Hall of
Mansion House, Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024. (Isabel Infantes/PA via AP)
As a result of the third-quarter
slowdown, the think tank said the U.K. has fallen below the U.S. at
the top of the growth leaderboard of the Group of Seven leading
industrial economies.
“This all serves to highlight that the government’s mission to renew
strong economic growth is both extremely hard, and absolutely
necessary," said Simon Pittaway, the think tank's senior economist.
One factor hobbling the economy, many economists say, is Britain's
departure from the European Union in 2020, which has made trade more
difficult. Though the post-Brexit trade agreement between the two
sides ensured there would be no tariffs placed on goods, exporters
are finding life tough.
As part of Brexit, the U.K. also left the frictionless single market
and the customs union, which means firms have to file forms and
customs declarations for the first time in years.
On Thursday evening, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the
“changing trading relationship” with the EU has weighed on the
economy.
“It underlines why we must be alert to and welcome opportunities to
rebuild relations while respecting the decision of the British
people," he said.
Starmer has said he wants to improve the trading relationship with
the EU but has ruled out the possibility of Britain rejoining the
single market or the customs union, or of a return of the freedom of
movement of people.
For many, that means there can only be limited improvements to the
current trading arrangements.
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