Showing posts with label UK growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK growth. Show all posts

Friday, 7 February 2014

UK economy to grow by 2.5% this year, says NIESR

The think tank said the UK's economic recovery had become "entrenched".
The estimates are broadly in line with those of other forecasters, including the UK's Office for Budget Responsibility.
NIESR also said it expected the unemployment rate to fall below 7% before the end of the year.
Jobless figures released last month showed that the unemployment rate fell to 7.1% in the three months to November.
Last year, the Bank of England said it would consider raising interest rates from their current historic lows if the unemployment rate fell below the 7% threshold, though it has since played down expectations of rate rises in the near future.
NIESR's forecast follows similar raised UK growth forecasts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which are also increasingly optimistic about the UK's economic prospects.
'Remarkable performance'
Falling unemployment and rising house prices have helped to encourage consumers to spend more, fuelling the recovery.
More sluggish sectors of the economy such as construction are also now showing signs of strengthening.

But concerns remain - particularly levels of business investment, which remain low, and stagnant wage growth which means prices are continuing to rise faster than many people's salaries.
"The UK's economic recovery is entrenched," the NIESR said in a statement. "Above trend growth returned in 2013, while the remarkable performance of the labour market persists."
"We expect consumer spending to remain the key driver of recovery in 2014 and 2015, supported by continued buoyancy in the housing market."
It added that the rapid fall in unemployment seen in recent months had "raised questions over the credibility" of the Bank of England's forward guidance, which saw 7% unemployment as an important threshold.
NIESR said it was forecasting a rise in interest rates as early as the second quarter of 2015, though this is expected to be a year after the 7% threshold is breached.
The Bank of England opted to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.5% again on Thursday. The rate has been at the historic low since March 2009.
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Monday, 20 January 2014

IMF set to upgrade UK growth forecasts as global economy expands

Forecast growth of 1.9% this year expected to be raised to 2.4% with IMF chief Christine Lagarde declaring 'optimism is in the air'
The International Monetary Fund is widely expected to raise its outlook for the UK on Tuesday, pushing up the country's growth forecasts by more than for any other major economy.
The Washington-based fund has been a critic of the UK's over-dependence on consumers as well as the government's Help to Buy housing market scheme. But it will bring a welcome boost to chancellor George Osborne when it updates its World Economic Outlook from last October's forecasts.
Back then it predicted UK national output would rise 1.9% in 2014 but is now expected to predict growth of 2.4%, according to a Sky News report. The IMF said it did not comment on leaks.
The fund is also expected to upgrade its outlook for the global economy, which in October it said would expand by 3.6% this year. That would reflect the cautiously optimistic tone in a New Year's speech from its managing director, Christine Lagarde, last week.
"This crisis still lingers. Yet optimism is in the air: the deep freeze is behind, and the horizon is brighter. My great hope is that 2014 will prove momentous … the year in which the seven weak years, economically speaking, slide into seven strong years," she said.
If confirmed, the substantial upgrade to the UK is likely to be seized on by Osborne as further proof the coalition's "economic plan is working" – an oft-used phrase in recent weeks as indicators have largely pointed to growth picking up.
The fund has in the past been highly critical of the coalition's austerity drive. In a damning indictment of the British chancellor's economic policies last year, the IMF's chief economist Olivier Blanchard warned Osborne would be "playing with fire" unless he eased the pace of budget cuts.
The IMF has also echoed other economists, including experts at the UK's own Office for Budget Responsibility, who said that the UK remains over-dependent on debt-fulled household spending to grow.
The latest crop of official data underscored those concerns, with weaker outturns for construction and manufacturing and a jump in Christmas retail sales.
Economists generally feel, however, that overall growth will pick up this year and the IMF is just the latest of a string of forecasters to raise the UK's outlook.
The business group CBI has pencilled in 2014 growth of 2.4%, the British Chambers of Commerce expects 2.7% and the OBR forecasts 2.4%.
A report from EY Item Club on Monday forecast UK economic growth would pick up to 2.7% this year from 1.9% in 2013. It too warned the recovery was not built on solid foundations, however, due largely to the pressure on household incomes.
Peter Spencer, chief economic adviser to the EY ITEM Club said: "It is hard to find another episode in time where employment has been rising and real wages falling for any significant period of time. The weakness of real earnings is proving to be the government's Achilles heel and could prove to be the weak spot in the recovery.
"Consumers have reduced the amount they save to fund their spending sprees. But they cannot continue to drive growth for much longer without an accompanying recovery in real wages or a rise in their debt to income ratio."
There have also been warnings that the recovery is not being felt throughout the UK, and is instead largely benefiting London and the south-east.
A study by the TUC trade unions group on Monday said the recent recovery in jobs had failed to reach the north-east, the north-west, Wales and the south-west, leaving them in the same situation or worse at providing jobs than they were 20 years ago.
The overall unemployment rate for the UK has been coming down faster than policymakers and most other forecasters had expected. Official data on Wednesday are expected to give a jobless rate of 7.3% for November, down from 7.4% the previous month.
Many economists expect the continuing drop in unemployment will prompt the Bank of England to tweak its forward guidance. At the moment, the BoE's guidance is that, barring various exceptions, it will not consider raising interest rates from their current 0.5% until a threshold of 7% unemployment is reached. The Bank may well lower that threshold for considering a hike to 6.5% unemployment, economists say.
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Monday, 23 September 2013

UK growth? Make London independent to mend the north-south divide

The south may be recovering, but the north shows Ed Miliband's aspiration for One Nation Britain is far off from reality 
Go to Preston and tell them that Britain is booming and the notion will be greeted with a hollow laugh. Tell the folks in Hull that the housing market has caught fire and they will assume you have taken leave of your senses. Mention in Rochdale that a corner has been turned and you are likely to be run out of town.
Ed Miliband's big idea at last year's Labour conference was One Nation Britain. This is a nice as an aspiration but bears no relation to the country we actually inhabit.
The latest growth figures are a classic example of Disraeli's dictum that there are three sorts of falsehoods: lies, damned lies and statistics. Sure, if you take the UK as a whole it is true that growth has returned. National output is expanding by 3% a year, slightly above its long-term trend.
But the country-wide average disguises considerable regional disparities, which are reflected in Britain's political make-up. Areas where the Conservatives are strong tend to have above-average prosperity; areas where Labour is strong tend to be poorer than the average. Marginal seats are clustered in those areas where the two nations collide.
House prices are one example of how regional economic performance varies. The Office for National Statistics said last week that property was 3.3% dearer in July 2013 than it had been a year earlier. But strip out London, where the cost of a home increased by almost 10%, and the south-east, and in the rest of the country prices were up by just 0.8%. That's below inflation, meaning that property prices are falling in real terms. In Scotland and Northern Ireland they are falling in absolute terms.
Now look at the regional breakdown for workless households, where the five areas with the worst record are all former industrial powerhouses lying north of a line drawn from the Severn estuary to the Wash: Glasgow, Liverpool, Hull, Birmingham and Wolverhampton. For the UK as a whole, 18% of households do not have anyone in work; in the unemployment blackspots it ranges from 27% to 30%.
At the other end of the scale, the areas with the fewest workless households are all in the south of England. Hampshire has the lowest percentage, at 10.6%, followed by North Northamptonshire (11.2%), Buckinghamshire (11.3%), West Sussex (11.3%) and Surrey (11.4%).
The north-south divide is not new. Far from it. There has been a prosperity gap for at least a century, ever since the industries that were at the forefront of the first industrial revolution went into decline. But the disparity between a thriving London and the rest has never been greater.
On past form, there will be a ripple effect from the south-east and there are tentative signs that this may be happening. But it is early days and, understandably, there is concern in the rest of the UK when it is mooted that economic policy needs to be tightened to tackle a problem that is chronic and heavily localised.
This is well illustrated in an article by Paul Ormerod published in Applied Economics Letters. Ormerod drills down into the UK labour market to see what has been happening to unemployment at the local authority level.
He notes that most labour market economists have seen the cure for unemployment as a good dose of "flexibility".
According to this approach, joblessness will only persist over time due to "rigidities" in the labour market. Remove the rigidities – such as over-generous welfare systems, employment security provisions, working time regulations, national pay bargaining – and the price of employing workers will adjust (ie reduce) to a level that will ensure that everybody who wants to work can find a job.

Unemployment blackspots

That's the theory. Ormerod tests it by looking at what has happened to unemployment over time. If greater labour market flexibility is the answer, then local authority areas with high levels of unemployment 20 years ago should have witnessed an improvement. But Ormerod finds no such correlations.
Those parts of the country that had relatively high levels of unemployment in 1990 still had them in 2010, even though the rates of joblessness went up or down according to whether the national economy was booming or struggling. "The striking feature of the results is the strength of persistence over time in patterns of relative unemployment at local level," Ormerod said.
Those who say flexibility is the answer may counter that the problem with Britain is that the labour market is still not flexible enough, and that only by making the UK more like the US can the problem of persistent unemployment be tackled. The only difficulty with this argument is that high levels of unemployment persist in America as well, although the correlation is not quite so strong as it is in Britain. This, though, may have more to do with the willingness and the ability of Americans to move than it does with the flexibility of the labour market.
Ormerod concludes: "The labour market flexibility of the theorists, beloved by policymakers, appears to be at odds with reality. This is especially the case in the UK, where relative unemployment levels persist very strongly over long periods of time. The findings certainly call into question the efficacy of policies that were designed to increase flexibility and to improve the relative performance of regions."
The cross-party support for a new high-speed rail link to the Midlands and the north is one attempt to find new ways to tackle the two nations problem. Supporters of HS2 say the cost will be worth it because the new line will lead to higher investment, increased rates of business creation and enhanced spending power in the northern regions.
Another solution to the north-south divide would be for London, rather than Scotland, to get its independence. Although Britain is not part of the single currency, London is Europe's unrivalled financial capital. From the dealing floors of Canary Wharf in the east to the hedge-fund cluster in Mayfair to the west, London is where the action is. Upmarket estate agents can tell where the world's latest troublespot is by the source of the foreign cash buying up properties in Belgravia and south Kensington: currently, it is Syria.
Were the government to publish regional trade figures, they would show that London runs a current account surplus with the rest of the UK, offset by capital transfers from the rich south to the poorer north. As an independent city state, London would have a higher exchange rate and higher borrowing costs. The rest of the country would, by contrast, get a competitive boost.
The reality is that London is a separate country. Perhaps we should make it official.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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Thursday, 5 September 2013

Strong services data signals UK growth is on track to outstrip rest of Europe

PMI survey's all-sector reading hits 15-year high, with order books growing at fastest pace since Tony Blair became PM
Britain's recovery is on track to outstrip the rest of Europe following a strong performance by the services sector in August.
The purchasing managers index, published by Markit, jumped to a new post-financial-crash high of 60.5 in August, up from 60.2 in July and its highest level since December 2006.
Markit said the latest survey of the all-important sector, which accounts for around 78% of the economy, sent the all-sector PMI to its highest level since the series began in 1998.
Chris Williamson, the data provider's chief European economist, said growth was now accelerating in manufacturing, services and construction, and that GDP growth could exceed 1.0% in the third quarter of the year.
The broad-based nature of the recovery will encourage George Osborne, who in public has remained careful to highlight the risks to the recovery.
Williamson said the latest data showed that growth was principally supported by a rise in new business.
Order books at companies ranging from banks to restaurants rose at the fastest pace since May 1997, the month Tony Blair first became prime minister.
"There were many reports of an ongoing strengthening of market confidence which helped companies convert enquiries into hard contract wins. Marketing and an improvement in the housing market were also noted as reasons for higher sales volumes," he said.
However, hopes that growth would bring a quick end to persistently high unemployment were dashed after the survey of services firms showed a slowdown in hiring.
The sector reported a net increase in employment for an eighth month in a row, but the rate of growth was described as "marginal".
Markit said: "A number of panellists attributed the slowdown to the non-replacement of leavers or cost considerations."
The lack of jobs growth will dash expectations that the Bank of England will raise rates earlier than expected in 2016.
The Bank of England governor, Mark Carney, said last month that he wanted to wait until the economy created an extra 750,000 jobs before considering a rise in base rates.
Martin Beck, UK economist at Capital Economics, said the services survey "adds to the relentlessly good news on the UK economy".
He said: "Following surprisingly strong gains in August's manufacturing and construction surveys, today's services result at face value points to quarterly GDP growth in Q3 not far off a rip-roaring 2%.
"However, this does not necessarily indicate that interest rates will have to rise earlier than the MPC expects. In common with the manufacturing and construction surveys released earlier this week, the expansion in services output suggested by the CIPS survey was accompanied by a softening in the survey's employment balance, which dropped from 53.6 to 50.6.
"This supports our, and the MPC's, view that rising productivity will accommodate much of the recovery in demand, with the unemployment rate taking a stubbornly long time to fall to the Bank's 7% threshold."
Across Europe's major economies services firms signalled that a year-long recession was coming to an end, with the exception of Italy, which failed to improve on July's poor performance.
The Italian services PMI improved only slightly on the previous month following a rise from July's 48.7 to 48.8. The August figure means another monthly contraction, in an economy that is already expected to shrink steadily this year. The City had hoped for a number close to 50, the cut-off between growth and contraction.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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