UK’s Q4 GDP growth slows to 0.2%
Brexit jitters hit business investment
LONDON: The UK economy is buckling under the strain of Brexit uncertainty.
Gross domestic product increased a smaller-than-forecast 0.2% in the fourth quarter, a third of the pace in the previous three months, while December alone saw the economy shrink by 0.4%, the most since before the 2016 vote to leave the European Union.
The slowdown came as businesses cut investment for a fourth consecutive quarter, the longest continuous decline since the financial crisis.
The fear gripping business was illustrated this month when Japanese carmaker Nissan Motor Co scrapped plans to build a new model in Sunderland. Airbus SE, which makes wings for commercial aircraft in Britain, has also threatened to switch investment elsewhere.
Business investment fell 0.9% in 2018.
The UK is due to leave the European Union in a little over six weeks, and politicians are yet to agree on an exit deal. With businesses demanding clarity, and Bank of England governor Mark Carney warning of damage from the “fog of Brexit,” the report underlines that that the political wrangling in Westminster comes at a real cost.
The economy is facing the worst year for growth since 2009, with economists warning of a recession if Britain leaves the EU without a deal to smooth the transition.
The BoE sees growth of 0.2% this quarter, but the sudden loss of momentum at the end to 2018 suggests the economy could stagnate, as indicated in recent purchasing manager surveys.
Still, there was no widespread evidence of stockpiling as the prospect of a no-deal Brexit looms larger, with inventories rising just £1.6 billion ($2 billion) in the quarter.
Organisations such as Heathrow Airport and Unilever have said they are keeping more on the storeroom shelf to guard against disruptions to supplies from the EU, but the Office for National Statistics said a relatively small number of firms reported doing so.
Brexit is not the only threat facing the economy. Major markets from the euro zone to China are losing momentum, weakening demand for British exports. Net trade cut 0.12 percentage points from growth in the fourth quarter as the trade deficit hit the highest in more than two years.
Other highlights:
Consumer spending growth stayed at 0.4% but business investment slumped 1.4%, the most since the start of 2016. Growth in services, the largest part of economy, slowed to 0.4%.
In December, all the main sectors of the economy shrank, with manufacturing falling for a sixth month, the longest run of declines since the financial crisis. The fall in overall GDP was the largest since March 2016.
The trade deficit narrowed to £12.1 billion in value terms in December.
Growth in 2018 slowed to 1.4%, and the BoE sees a further moderation this year to 1.2%.
GDP rose 1.3% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, the weakest since the second quarter of 2012.