The Scotsman

Scottish output speeds up at start of 2017

- By MARTIN FLANAGAN mflanagan@scotsman.com

Scottish private sector output strengthen­ed in January, with new business levels expanding at the fastest pace for 20 months, figures from the Bank of Scotland’s latest purchasing managers’ index (PMI) shows today.

However, the weakness of sterling intensifie­d imported cost pressures, sparking the sharpest rise in business selling prices since February, 2011.

The overall PMI, embracing manufactur­ing and services, rose to 51.2 last month, up from 50.7 in December, where any figure above 50 denotes growth.

Scottish manufactur­ers were behind the rise in business activity, with firms raising production at the quickest pace in nearly three years, while the services sector held the same level of output as the previous month.

Overall new business growth hit a 20-month high. Nick Laird, regional MD of Bank of Scotland commercial banking, said it was a “promising” start to 2017, but that selling prices were likely to continue upwards.

It comes as UK inflation in January is expected to have come within a whisker of the Bank of Enland’s mid-term inflation target when official data is published on Tuesday.

The City expects inflation to have risen to between 1.8 and 1.9 per cent, from 1.6 per cent in December, driven by increased food and petrol prices.

Howard Archer, UK economist at IHS Global Insight, said retail sales figures, also out this week, will show consumers spending less as “rising inflation squeezes purchasing power”. 0 Howard Archer says people are spending less

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