The Scotsman

Economic fears as UK service activity heads off the cliff

● Economists warn that latest PMI data far worse than aftermath of finance crisis

- @IHSMARKITP­MI By SCOTT REID sreid@scotsman.com

Britain’s economy is on course for a downturn deeper than anything seen in living memory, experts have warned, after a record fall in service sector activity.

The closely watched IHS Markit/cips purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for services plummeted to 13.4 in April, by far the worst score since the survey started in 1996. Any reading below 50 denotes contractio­n.

Services makes up almost three-quarters of the UK economy although the PMI snapshot does not encompass the embattled retail sector.

Tim Moore, economics director at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey, said: “April’s PMI data highlights that the downturn in the UK economy during the second quarter of 2020 will be far deeper and more widespread than anything seen in living memory.”

He said the score was con“a sistent with a quarterly 7 per cent drop in the economy, but even that prediction may be optimistic.

“We expect the actual decline in GDP could be even greater, in part because the PMI excludes the vast majority of the self-employed and the retail sector,” Moore added.

The economy had already been under pressure in March when the survey returned a then record low of 34.5 as pubs and restaurant­s saw their trade dwindle, The previous record low was 40.1 in November 2008 amid the global financial crisis.

In April, the survey found that only one in five services companies managed to avoid a drop in activity when compared with March. Some firms, hit by total closures, said their business had totally stopped.

Duncan Brock, group director at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply (Cips), said: “Though a further downturn was anticipate­d after last month’s historical­ly low figures, the scale of this fall is unnerving.

significan­t number of businesses in shutdown now may never reopen. Even with some movement in the lifting of restrictio­ns on business activity, the UK economy is not a tap that can just be turned on.”

One in seven companies said activity had been unchanged since March, largely thanks to continuity plans such as working from home.

“Survey respondent­s indicated a tentative upturn in their business expectatio­ns amid hopes that a gradual reopening of the economy can be achieved in the summer,” Moore added.

Ayush Ansal, chief investment officer at hedge fund Crimson Black Capital said: “November 2008 was a minor economic blip compared to April’s abyss.

“It will have been priced in by markets some time ago, but the precipitou­s drop-off in services output in April is still terrifying to behold.

“That business expectatio­ns have picked up slightly is more a reflection of our recalibrat­ion to chaos than hopes of an imminent rebound. The service sector has been shattered.”

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