ONS to release GDP figures amid fears UK may have entered recession – latest

Hunt insists plan to bring inflation down is working despite 4 per cent increase

The UK is thought to have slipped into recession at the end of last year, official figures are set to show on Thursday.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) is expected to reveal that the UK economy contracted for the second quarter in a row in the final three months of the year.

Most economists are forecasting a 0.1 per cent decline in gross domestic product (GDP) between October and December.

This would follow a 0.1 per cent contraction in the previous three months, after a downward revision against the zero growth initially estimated.

A technical recession is defined by two or more quarters in a row of falling GDP.

Experts say that if confirmed, it would be a recession in the “mildest of senses” and is likely to be short-lived, with many preferring to describe the UK’s economy as having stagnated.

But a recession would deal a blow to prime minister Rishi Sunak, who has promised to grow the economy as one of his five priorities.

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Jane Dalton15 February 2024 02:00

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Jane Dalton15 February 2024 01:00

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UK likely to have slipped into recession, experts say

Jane Dalton15 February 2024 00:01

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London shares soar

Shares in London soared on Wednesday after new official inflation figures were lower than economists had expected, increasing the chance of a Bank of England rate cut in months to come.

The FTSE-100 rose 56.12 points, or 0.75%, ending the day at 7,568.4, as retailers and housebuilder Persimmon joined the bottler of Coca-Cola close to the top of the index.

The inflation rate was 4% in January, the same as the month before, but traders celebrated because economists had expected a rise to 4.2%.

“The past 24 hours have been full of surprises, and this morning’s UK inflation data certainly caught markets on the hop,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at online trading platform IG.

“Rapid deceleration in price growth has hit the pound hard, as it seems a Bank of England rate cut has become a much more likely event in the first half of the year.

“This has helped the FTSE-100 to outperform other indices today, though of course it lags far behind on a longer-term view.”

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 23:00

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Workers ‘set to benefit from tax cut and wage growth’

Workers are likely to start feeling better off despite a short-lived recession, say experts.

Ellie Henderson, an economist at Investec said: “Our base case is that the economy probably did tip into a recession, although this would be in the mildest of senses: a better description of the trend might be stagnation.”

Investec is pencilling in a 0.1% contraction in the fourth quarter, with weak retail data dragging on the all-important services sector and leading to a 0.3% fall in output in December.

Ms Henderson added: “In all, we expect that it was a tough end to the year for the UK economy, but 2024 is likely to have got off to a better start as household budgets look to have loosened a little.

“Indeed, the decline in inflation combined with still high wage growth will continue to drive real household disposable incomes higher, a key factor behind the expected recovery this year.

“There will also be the added lift to post-tax incomes from the 2p cut to employees’ National Insurance Contributions, effective from January 6 – and, in all likelihood, more to come in the March Budget.”

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 22:00

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Inflation surprises experts by holding steady

UK inflation defied expectations to hold steady at 4% in January as lower food prices helped offset increases in energy costs, official figures show. Economists had expected a rise to 4.2%:

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 20:30

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Economy is flat at best, says Bank chief

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has signalled that a recession, if confirmed, would be likely to be brief, telling a Lords committee on Wednesday the economy was beginning to pick up.

Mr Bailey told the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee: “In our February Monetary Policy Report, it was in the balance – we didn’t have a recession in the forecast, but it is at best flat, in the view we took.

“It wouldn’t take much to tip it either way, frankly.

“Going forward – and I think this is in some ways more significant – we are now seeing some signs of the beginning of a pick-up in some of the surveys, for instance … we’ve got a modest pick-up this year which continues thereafter.”

Andrew Bailey at the committee

(PA)

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 19:20

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Economy thought to have been weak last year

Official figures for the fourth quarter of last year are also expected to show that the economy was weak last year as a whole.

ONS estimates suggest it did not grow at all between April and June, before shrinking between July and September, which has left the UK at risk of recession in the final three months.

(PA Archive)

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 18:37

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UK technically in recession last year, statistics set to reveal

Welcome to our live blog on the UK economy.

The UK is believed to have slipped into recession at the end of last year after a weak December for the country’s economy, official figures are set to show.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) is predicted to reveal that the UK economy contracted for the second quarter in a row in the final three months of 2023.

Most economists are forecasting a 0.1% decline in gross domestic product (GDP) between October and December.

This would follow a 0.1% contraction in the previous three months, after a downward revision against the zero growth initially estimated.

A contraction in the fourth quarter would mean the UK tipped into a technical recession, as defined by two or more quarters in a row of falling GDP.

The Bank of England has held interest rates at 5.25% four times in a row.

(PA Wire)

Jane Dalton14 February 2024 18:26

Credit
1: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/uk-recession-economy-sunak-business-gdp-news-b2496294.html

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