The Scotsman

Slowdown in services adds to flurry of economic woe

L Brexit and general election cited as factors l Follows easing in manufactur­ing and constructi­on

- By MARTIN FLANAGAN

Activity in the UK’S linchpin services sector slid more than expected in June, rounding off a “triple-whammy” of disappoint­ing economic setbacks for last month.

The Markit/cips services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) said the downturn in growth reflected the weakest rise in new work in the sector since September 2016, with business optimism falling to its second-lowest since December 2011.

The survey cited “Brexitrela­ted risk aversion”, economic uncertaint­y and the overhang of the June general election as reasons for the fall in activity. It followed recent similar disappoint­ing news from the manufactur­ing and constructi­on sectors.

At 53.4, the IHS Markit/cips services activity index was down on the 53.8 recorded in May. with any figure over 50 denoting growth.

Chris Williamson, chief economist at IHS Markit, said: “A slowing in services sector growth completes a triple-whammy of disappoint­ing PMI survey readings… it’s clear that the economy heads into the third quarter losing momentum.”

He said the economic headwinds came as households were facing rising inflation, “and the economy’s resilience is being tested”.

The services sector accounts for roughly three-quarters of the UK economy, covering areas such as retail, pubs, restaurant­s, hotels, finance, transport and IT.

Signalling the widespread easing of steam behind UK GDP, the all-sector IHS Markit/ Cips PMI fell to 53.9 in June from 54.5 in May.

“[Services] survey respondent­s commented on subdued business and consumer confidence, alongside some instances of delayed decision-making around the election,” the services survey said yesterday.

Duncan Brock, customer relationsh­ips director at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply (Cips), noted: “A creeping doubt appears to be the cause of [June’s] below par performanc­e as the UK’S departure from the EU and the unpredicta­ble political climate continues to impact on consumers and businesses alike.” l UK productivi­ty fell in the first three months of 2017, bringing an end to a run of growth, new figures show.

The Office for National Statistics said labour productivi­ty as measured by output per hour fell by 0.5 per cent from the final quarter of 2016 to the first three months of this year.

It was the first productivi­ty fall since end-2015. Nomination­s have today opened for Entreprene­urial Scotland’s annual Entreprene­ur of the Year Awards, which are now in their 21st year. The accolades are delivered in associatio­n with Deloitte and new partner Barclays, and the ceremony in November moves to new event space SWG3 in Glasgow. Sandy Kennedy, chief executive of Entreprene­urial Scotland, said it is “committed to shining a light on the most outstandin­g entreprene­urial talent in the country”.

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