The Pak Banker

UK economy rebounding, as public borrowing up

- LONDON -AFP

Britain's economic recovery from the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic has gathered pace, data showed on Friday, but government borrowing rose past the 2 trillion pound ($2.6 trillion) mark and fears of future job losses are mounting.

Retail sales rose above pre-pandemic levels in July, the first full month for many shops reopening after lockdown, and August's Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) data showed the fastest growth in almost seven years. But Britain's economy still faces a long recovery after shrinking by a record 20% in the second quarter, the largest decline of any big country.

"The UK is still seeing a V-shape bounce in activity. But ... a hot summer can quickly turn to a cold autumn," HSBC economist Liz Martins said, pointing to a softening in euro zone business activity as coronaviru­s cases begin to rise again.

Retail sales in July were 1.4% above year-ago levels and 3.0% above their level before the pandemic, the

Office for National Statistics said. August's preliminar­y composite PMI, which covers most businesses outside retail, hit its highest level since October 2013.

But employers are increasing­ly planning to shed jobs and were making staff redundant rather than bringing them back from a government-subsidised furlough scheme that expires in October. "Scarring from the pandemic and lingering doubts about the sustainabi­lity of recovery resulted in a need to cut overheads," said Tim Moore, economics director at IHS Markit, which compiles the PMIs.

The Bank of England forecasts unemployme­nt will reach 7.5% by year-end, almost double its most recent reading. Separately, the Confederat­ion of British Industry said manufactur­ing orders were "severely depressed", with little improvemen­t in August.

Stuttering PMI surveys for the euro zone - where countries exited lockdown earlier than Britain - suggested the boost from pent-up demand was already fading. Retail sales are only part of overall household spending.

A GfK survey showed no improvemen­t in consumer confidence since early July.

Within retail, different businesses have had contrastin­g fortunes. Grocery sales are 3% up on the year and online sales are 50% higher than before the pandemic. But sales volumes at clothing and footwear stores are 25% lower than last year. Stores including Marks & Spencer, Boots and John Lewis have announced plans for major job cuts.

Friday's data also laid bare the impact of increased public spending and a slide in tax revenues on the public finances. Public sector net debt exceeded 2 trillion pounds in July for the first time, and is its highest since 1961 as a share of gross domestic product. Government borrowing so far this financial year is 150.5 billion pounds, almost seven times higher than in the same period in 2019 though below the 178.8 billion pounds Britain's budget forecaster­s predicted last month.

The govt has spent more than 35 billion pounds so far on its job support scheme, the largest single measure to tackle the economic impact of the pandemic.

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