Business lobby group cites growing confidence, forecasting UK growth of 1.2% this year and 2.3% in 2014
The CBI has raised its forecast for UK economic growth this year to 1.2% – double the pace predicted by George Osborne in his March budget – as the business lobbying group cited mounting confidence across the British economy.
It becomes the latest organisation to raise its outlook for the UK after a series of surveys and official data have suggested green shoots of recovery are taking hold, prompting the CBI to raise its 2013 growth estimate from 1%. However, the CBI, which has long been a supporter of the government's austerity drive and promises to cut the deficit, sounded a note of caution as it warned that ministers' push for a rebalancing away from consumption is taking longer than expected.
"The economy has started to gain momentum and confidence is picking up, but it's still early days," said John Cridland, the CBI's director general. "We need to see a full-blown rebalancing of our economy, with stronger business investment and trade before we can call a sustainable recovery. We hope that will begin to emerge next year, as the eurozone starts growing again." Government statistics published today show signs of a rebalancing, or at least the impact of austerity measures on public sector jobs, with private sector employment at its highest in 15 years at 24.1 million people.
The CBI said there were "signs of a pick-up in confidence across a broad range of sectors, including services, construction and manufacturing".
For 2014, the group is now pencilling 2.3% growth, up from May's forecast of 2%. Leading thinktank, the National Institute for Economic and Social Research, and forecasters Fathom Consulting both upgraded their outlook for the UK economy earlier this month to 1.2%. That growth is based on a rise in disposable incomes and some support from exports as the eurozone continues to recover following a protracted recession that was finally confirmed over last week.
Official UK data on Friday is expected to add to the tentatively optimistic tone, confirming economic growth accelerated in the second quarter to 0.6%, double the pace in the first three months of this year. That would be unchanged from the number the Office for National Statistics estimated in its first take on GDP for the quarter, which was welcomed by the chancellor as showing the economy has moved "out of intensive care".
A handful of economists believe growth could be revised higher on Friday to 0.7%. Among them, Philip Shaw at Investec, notes that numbers from the construction sector have been revised up since that first estimate on growth and that the performance of the dominant services is also likely to be nudged up.
"Our 2013 GDP forecast is still +1.2%, but we are tempted to upgrade this modestly given the positive data dynamics recorded recently," he added.
But many economists share the CBI's concern that the economy remains overly dependent on consumers, who account for around two-thirds of all spending. They say consumers are not in a strong position to drive a recovery as they grapple with the biggest squeeze on household budgets for decades.
There is fresh evidence of that pressure on Monday. The latest Asda Income Tracker suggests disposable household incomes fell last month as wages failed to keep pace with living costs.
The supermarket chain says the average UK household had £160 a week of disposable income in July, down £1 a week from a year earlier and £5 a week from a peak in February 2010. It blamed energy bills for burning a hole in household budgets after they rose by 8.2% over the past year.
"A 'feel-good' summer has contributed to a boost in retail sales, but we can't ignore the fact that the squeeze on income growth and rising cost of living continue to pull at consumer purse strings," said Asda chief executive Andy Clarke.
But he noted a rise in consumer optimism, nonetheless. That chimes with a separate survey suggesting households spent more in August as they reported that access to unsecured loans improved and they were relatively upbeat about their finances.
Data company Markit, said the measure of financial wellbeing in its Household Finance Index dipped "only slightly" from July's record high. It stood at 40.8 in August, down from 41.5 in July, the highest since the survey was launch in early 2009.
Still, there were contrasting feelings around the country.
"The strains on finances are receding fastest among those in private sector service jobs, while those working in construction, retail and the public sector trail behind. On a regional basis, familiar trends continued in August as people in Scotland and the south of England were the least downbeat about their finances, while those in Wales and the north of England were among the most pessimistic," said Tim Moore, senior economist at Markit.
Growing evidence of a renewed pick-up in house prices has also boosted sentiment among homeowners but at the same time prompted warnings that Britain could be headed for a damaging property boom and bust.
The average asking price for flats hit a record high of £209,652 in August, Rightmove said, as it joined the chorus of warnings over government schemes.
"Flats are most in demand by first-time buyers and buy-to-let investors and we have seen prices for this property type hit their highest ever level as supply fails to keep up with an increase in demand at the bottom of the market," said Rightmove director Miles Shipside.
"Demand is already on the up, and that's before the roll-out of phase two of the Help to Buy stimulus. It is now critical that the supply of property improves so that the goal of a significant increase in transaction numbers is not over-shadowed by an unsustainable boom in property prices."
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