UK Leads Global PMI Rankings, But Also Reports Steepest Loss Of Jobs

 | Oct 11, 2020 06:57

  • Japan, France and Spain bucked a wider global recovery trend in September, the latter two slipping back into decline amid rising Covid-19 infections
  • The UK has reported the sharpest rise in output of the largest economies around the world, but has also seen the steepest cut to jobs
  • The JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) Global PMI™ (compiled by IHS Markit) continued to indicate a robust expansion of the global economy in September, but national variations in economic performance remained marked, often due to varied service sector performances arising from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) restrictions. Employment trends have also varied markedly, likely due to policy differences, meaning the outlook for jobs has deteriorated in Europe and in particular the UK.

    UK leads global rankings

    Of the largest developed and emerging economies, the UK reported the strongest expansion of business activity in September, albeit with growth moderating from August's six-year high, followed by Germany.

    India and China also reported robust expansions, with the former fueled by the steepest rise in manufacturing activity recorded by any country in September, though service sector activity continued to slump. In contrast, China's growth was broad-based across manufacturing and services. The US, Russia and Brazil all also reported above global-average performances.

    The strongest downturn was seen in Spain, followed by Japan and then France. Spain has only managed to record one month of growth since February, according to the PMI, with a renewed and accelerating downturn evident in both August and September, led by a steepening drop in service sector activity. France meanwhile fell into decline for the first time in four months, as rising factory output growth was countered by a renewed fall in service sector activity.

    Japan has meanwhile failed to register any growth since the economy stabilised in January, although the downturn has moderated over the past four months.