Evening Standard

UK economy beats gloom but ‘cracks are developing’

- Russell Lynch

THE UK economy is confoundin­g the doomsayers for now after faster growth at the end of 2016 — but the surprise spurt might be “as good as it gets”, experts warned today.

Sterling strengthen­ed as the Office for National Statistics revised up growth to 0.7% between October and December, thanks to a much better performanc­e from manufactur­ers than originally estimated.

Its detailed figures showed trade providing the biggest tailwind as exporters benefited from the pound’s post-Brexit weakness. But the figures also revealed slowing consumer spending — which accounts for about two-thirds of the economy — as well as a 1% fall in business investment spending by cautious firms. Capital Economics economist Paul Hollingswo­rth said the data could be “as good as it gets for now at least”. He added: “Household spending is likely to slow further as inflation picks up and erodes growth in real incomes.

“And lingering uncertaint­y about the UK’s future relationsh­ip with the EU as negotiatio­ns get under way may hold back investment.”

Markit chief economist Chris Williamson commented: “Cracks are developing.”

Employee compensati­on, which includes wages and pensions, ground to a virtual halt, rising just 0.1% over the quarter in its weakest growth since 2013. Although salaries grew, employer benefit contributi­ons fell, the ONS said.

@russ_lynch

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