The Journal

Recession in UK ‘slightly less severe’

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THE recession the UK entered in the latter half of 2023 was slightly less severe than first thought, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed as it released revised figures.

The economy still shrunk for two quarters in a row, the definition of a recession, but the total contractio­n over that six-month period dropped from 0.5% to 0.4%. This is because of a small revision to the fourth quarter where the rate of contractio­n fell to 0.31% from 0.34%.

Combined with the third quarter, unrevised when measured to two decimal places, that left a slightly lower headline figure, the ONS said.

“Our updated set of GDP figures shows quarterly growth unrevised across 2023, with a little growth in the first quarter and small contractio­ns in the latter half of the year,” said ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown.

“New figures on households show that savings remained high, with an increase in income in the last quarter of the year.”

Across the whole of last year, GDP is thought to have risen 0.1% – the worst performanc­e since the 2009 financial crisis if the pandemic year of 2020 is excluded. When measuring real GDP per person, it is estimated to have fallen by 0.6% in the fourth quarter, and has not grown since the first three-month period of 2022.

That is because the population has grown faster than GDP. In 2023, GDP per person is estimated to have dropped 0.7%.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said: “I don’t think any of us were expecting the economy to actually grow last year: the Bank of England wasn’t, the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity wasn’t, in fact it did, albeit at a very slow rate.”

Labour shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said: “Rishi Sunak has broken his promise to grow the economy and left Britain in recession with working people paying the price.”

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