Today’s news that the UK’s GDP figures fell by 0.2 per cent in the last three months of 2011 will generate the usual stale, political hot air.
But I doubt it comes as any great surprise to anyone in business.
The GDP figure had already been comprehensively second-guessed by a series of business surveys which suggested that sentiment had been weakening from the summer onwards.
You have to attach the usual health warning to today’s number. This is actually an estimate from the Office for National Statistics based on its analysis of around 40 per cent of the data which goes into the GDP figure.
It will be revised at a later date, and past revisions have usually been upwards.
What’s behind the fall? A couple of interesting contributing factors – a mild winter has seen people turn down their heating, so electricity and gas production was down more than four per cent. November’s public sector strike – which took out the equivalent of a million working days – will also have nicked the number down a bit.
But they can’t hide falls in manufacturing, construction and a standstill in services, all of which tell a familiar story of weak demand in a cautious economy.
This is also a significant reverse on the third quarter of 2011, when the economy grew by 0.6 per cent. So the slowdown was a marked one.
There is no sign of any immediate improvement in this picture, and it won’t be in the least bit surprising if we see another negative number for the first three months of this year, especially with the continuing uncertainty in the eurozone – our main export market, don’t forget – acting as a drag on the global economy.
There are some optimistic chinks, though, and some of the sentiment I pick up from business people is that they’re getting pretty fed-up with the political doom-mongers.
Inflation is expected to continue falling this year, which should allow businesses to start rebuilding profit margins and consumers to feel like they’ve got a few quid spare. Tax changes for low and middle-income earners are likely to have a similar effect.
So the UK economy should get back on to a slow path to recovery in the second half of this year.
I’ll repeat a few salient points about where UK plc is right now: a swift recovery from a devastating financial crash was never likely because we are dealing not just with huge debts but the need to make structural change to an economy which has lost some activity permanently.
Our economy isn’t falling apart at the seams, because it is the sixth biggest in the world and has a welfare safety net which didn’t exist in the 1930s.
Businesses may be heartily sick of recession talk, but they’ll have to tolerate it for a few months yet. Nevertheless, this isn’t a return to the dark days of the crunch.
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