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The UK economy unexpectedly shrank 0.1 per cent in October, the second contraction in a row, in a blow to the Labour government’s economic agenda.
The monthly change in GDP published on Friday by the Office for National Statistics undershot the 0.1 per cent expansion forecast by economists polled by Reuters. It followed a 0.1 per cent contraction in the previous month.
Sterling fell 0.4 per cent against the dollar following the data release.
The figures underscore the economic challenge for the new Labour government, which won the UK general election in July with a manifesto commitment to “secure the highest sustained growth in the G7”.
Labour has since sought to manage expectations, with chancellor Rachel Reeves warning of a grim inheritance in the public finances including a £22bn fiscal “black hole” ahead of her tax-raising October Budget.
“While the figures this month are disappointing, we have put in place policies to deliver long-term economic growth,” Reeves said on Friday.
The Conservatives claimed the poor growth figures reflected the impact on business of Reeves’ gloomy post-election rhetoric on the economy.
Mel Stride, shadow chancellor, said on Friday: “It is no wonder businesses are sounding the alarm. This fall in growth shows the stark impact of the chancellor’s decisions and continually talking down the economy.”
Friday’s figures point to a weak start to the fourth quarter after annual economic growth slowed to 0.1 per cent in the three months to September, down from 0.5 per cent in the previous quarter.
Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, noted that the economy has grown in just one of the five months to October, and that growth is now 0.1 per cent lower than before Labour came into power.
“That suggests it’s not just the Budget that is holding the economy back,” he said. “Instead, the drag from higher interest rates may be lasting longer than we thought.”
Last week, the OECD cut its 2024 growth forecast for the UK to 0.9 per cent from the 1.1 per cent that was expected in September due to weaker incoming data.
However, it expects growth to accelerate to 1.7 per cent in 2025. That figure is weaker than the 2.4 per cent expansion forecast for the US, but stronger than the 1.3 per cent for the Eurozone.
According to Friday’s ONS figures, output in the dominant services sector registered no growth in October, with production contracting 0.6 per cent and construction registering a 0.4 fall.
“The risk of a quarterly contraction [in the final three months of the year] is no longer negligible,” said Sanjay Raja, economist at Deutsche Bank, noting that a possible trade war when President-elect Donald Trump re-enters the White House represents a significant external headwind.
ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown said: “Oil and gas extraction, pubs and restaurants and retail all had weak months, partially offset by growth in telecoms, logistics and legal firms.”
Separate data published on Friday by the research company GfK showed consumer confidence remained low in November, edging up only one point to minus-17 in December.
The ONS reported mixed comments from businesses relating to the Budget. Those negatively affected said that turnover was impacted as customers waited for the announcements from the chancellor.
However, others said that activity had been brought forward in anticipation of various Budget measures.
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer recently announced that he would target household disposable income as a new “milestone” for rating the success of his economic policies.
High borrowing costs are still limiting household spending and business activity, but they have come down from their peak after the Bank of England cut interest rates in August and November to the current 4.75 per cent.
Markets expect more rate cuts next year as inflation eases from its multi-decade high reached in 2022.
James Smith, economist ING, said he believes the UK economy is still “poised to outpace most of western Europe next year”, since Labour increased public spending by more than 2 per cent of GDP compared to the Conservatives’ Budget plans.
Additional reporting by George Parker and Jim Pickard