Trade
4 years ago

UK economy flat-lines, hit by Brexit and global slowdown

Published :

Updated :

Britain's economy grew at its slowest annual pace in nearly seven years in October, a weak backdrop to Thursday's national election, in which both leading parties are promising to boost growth, reports Reuters.

The approach of a Brexit deadline and the global economic slowdown hit Britain's factories and construction industry during the month, official data showed on Tuesday.

Gross domestic product rose by 0.7 per cent compared with October 2018, the weakest growth since March 2012, when Britain was still trying to shake off the effects of the global financial crisis.

In the three months to October, growth flat-lined compared with the previous three-month period, the Office for National Statistics said, as expected by economists in a Reuters poll.

The economy also showed no change in monthly terms, the ONS said, weaker than a median forecast of 0.1 per cent growth in the poll.

Financial markets, fixated on the Dec. 12 national election, showed little reaction to the data.

"The stagnation in GDP in October is unlikely to influence many people's vote in Thursday's election, but it could prompt some more (Bank of England officials) to consider voting for lower interest rates in the coming months," said Paul Dales, chief UK economist at consultancy Capital Economics.

Britain's economy avoided falling into a pre-Brexit recession over the summer. But it has slowed as an Oct. 31 deadline for leaving the European Union - now extended to Jan. 31 - approached, and uncertainty about the election outcome has probably made business more cautious.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has urged voters to back him because his Brexit deal would "unleash a great tide of investment" when it clears a currently deadlocked parliament.

But worries about a chaotic exit from the EU are unlikely to vanish even if Johnson wins because he has ruled out asking Brussels to extend a transition period if a deal for future trade ties has not been agreed by the end of 2020.

The opposition Labour Party has said it will hold a fresh Brexit referendum after negotiating a new Brexit deal, potentially offsetting some of the concerns among many businesses about other Labour policies, including higher corporate taxes and nationalization of some key industries.

Samuel Tombs, an economist with Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the economy was growing more slowly than the BoE expected, but the promises of looser fiscal policy by the main political parties would reduce the need for lower interest rates.

The ONS also said industrial output fell by 0.7 per cent in the three months to October while Britain's services grew by 0.2 per cent, the weakest increase since June. Construction output suffered the biggest monthly fall since January 2018.

Separately, the ONS said Britain's goods trade deficit widened by more than expected to nearly 14.5 billion pounds ($18.60 billion) in October from 11.5 billion pounds in September.

The ONS said the approach of the lapsed October Brexit deadline appeared to have increased imports and exports in October, but by less than before the original Brexit deadline at the end of March.

Share this news