Ashbourne News Telegraph

Steepest rise in E Mids yet as demand picks up

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BUSINESS expectatio­ns are strengthen­ing as lockdown draws to an end and the impact of the mammoth vaccinatio­n programme takes hold, according to a new banking report.

The latest Natwest East Midlands Business Activity Index suggests a renewed emphasis on business activity, with the biggest rise in output since September, when restrictio­ns were more relaxed.

The seasonally adjusted index showing the monthon-month change in manufactur­ing and services did however suggest the region’s upturn was slower than the UK average.

It said a renewed increase in client demand was the fastest since last August despite being slower than the rest of the country.

Anecdotal evidence suggested the rise in new sales was linked to plans to relax Covid-19 restrictio­ns and the release of pent-up demand following an end to stay-at-home measures.

Business confidence among private sector firms in the East Midlands strengthen­ed at the end of the first quarter and was the most marked since September 2015.

The degree of optimism was broadly in line with the UK trend. Where firms registered expectatio­ns of an increase in output over the coming year, they attributed it to the planned roll-back of restrictio­ns.

March data also indicated a second successive monthly expansion in workforce numbers across the East Midlands private sector.

Some businesses attributed the rise to greater new order inflows, with some also highlighti­ng an increase in administra­tive requiremen­ts following Brexit.

The rate of job creation was the steepest since November 2018 despite the region seeing the slowest upturn of the 10 monitored areas which reported a rise in employment. Panellists said a rise in work-in-hand was due to a stronger order inflows.

Some firms in the manufactur­ing sector also stated that supply shortages and delays had constraine­d production capacity. On top of that, the March data signalled a fourth consecutiv­e monthly increase in selling prices across the East Midlands private sector – the fastest rate of inflation accelerati­on for just under a decade, amid efforts to pass on higher costs to clients where possible. The local increase was quicker than the UK trend.

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