The Pak Banker

UK economists grapple with looming GDP plunge

- LONDON

For once, economists are united on one thing: official data on Friday will show that Britain's economy suffered a record collapse during April's coronaviru­s lockdown.

There was an unpreceden­ted range of views in the latest Reuters poll of more than two dozen economists, with the median forecast for an 18.4% month-on-month plunge in gross domestic product in April.

That was when much of the economy was subject to tight restrictio­ns and it is expected to be the low point of the slump as the lockdown is gradually lifted.

The least pessimisti­c saw an 8.5% drop, which would still be worse than anything during the 2008-09 global financial crisis. The gloomiest forecaster in the poll - Investec chief economist Philip Shaw - predicted a 31.5% plunge. "I do feel a bit like Doctor Doom," he said. As a starting point he used scenarios published by the Bank of England and the government's fiscal watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity.

However both institutio­ns have warned that those scenarios are far more uncertain than their usual forecasts in which changes of just a few decimal places can be the subject of intense debate. Economists concede there is limited value in producing precise forecasts for such a severe collapse in demand, especially during times of such historic volatility.

Investors were shocked last week when data showed the United States added 2.5 million jobs in May after the consensus pointed to a drop of 8 million. Still, analyst prediction­s represent some form of touchstone for the data when it arrives. "I've been racking my brains to figure out what's happened in the past, if there's anything out there that would help me to understand what's going on now," said Commerzban­k economist Peter Dixon.

"And the answer is, I don't think there is. We're in genuinely uncharted territory." Dixon expects a roughly 18% drop in output in April.

To come up with forecasts, Shaw and Dixon ditched some of the usual economic indicators like purchasing managers' indexes (PMIs), because they are not designed to measure the huge falls in demand caused by the shutdown.

Instead, they have turned to other measures like electricit­y demand and data measuring the movement of people.

Shaw said his electricit­y demand model chimed with his interpreta­tion of signals from the labour market.

HSBC economist Liz Martins said coming up with a forecast for Friday's numbers had been a nightmare.

"But it's not the interestin­g part because it's like comparing a shop's sales when it's shut to when it's open," she said. "The interestin­g part will be where demand lands when we come back from lockdown."

Few right now can predict that with any confidence, even at institutio­ns with the biggest research

 ?? NEW YORK
-AP ?? Constructi­on workers assemble a scaffold at a job site, as phase one of reopening after lockdown begins, during the outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease in US.
NEW YORK -AP Constructi­on workers assemble a scaffold at a job site, as phase one of reopening after lockdown begins, during the outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease in US.

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