UK Economy Sees Strong End To The Year, But Cracks Appear

 | Feb 23, 2017 05:17

News of faster than previously estimated growth at the end of last year confirmed the economy’s overall resilience after the summer Brexit vote. But cracks are appearing to suggest that growth will slow in 2017.h2 Strong end to 2016/h2

The UK economy grew 0.7% in the final quarter of 2016, according to data from the Office for National Statistics, revised higher from a prior estimate of 0.6%. However, revisions mean the economy now grew 1.8% in 2016, less than the 2.0% previously thought.

The news of faster than previously thought growth at the end of last year is marred by worrying signs about the durability of the upturn. A slowdown in consumer spending and a drop in business investment raise questions about the extent to which such strong growth can be sustained. Consumer spending rose by 0.7%, making the weakest contribution to the economy for a year, while business investment fell 1.0%.

We should bear in mind that the investment data are often subject to heavy revision, and businesses generally remain upbeat about the year ahead. Surveys show business optimism about the year ahead running at its highest in one and a half years, suggesting companies are clearly expecting the good times to continue.

h3 Cracks appearing/h3

On the other hand, there are cracks developing: households appear to be pulling back on spending as higher inflation bites and Brexit remains a major source of uncertainty.

PMI survey data already indicate that, although robust economic growth has been maintained at the start of 2017 (indicating that 0.5% GDP growth could be seen in the first quarter if no further loss of pace is seen in February and March), there was some slight loss of momentum in January.