Western Mail

Services and constructi­on sectors led to UK economy growth

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THE UK economy bounced back in July as the services sector rebounded and constructi­on output reached a record high.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the economy expanded 0.3% in July, while gross domestic product (GDP) rose 0.6% on a threemonth basis.

That was ahead of economist expectatio­ns for a 0.1% and 0.5% rise, respective­ly.

Economic growth was bolstered in part by the UK’s dominant services sector, which grew 0.3% month on month thanks to activity in the profession­al, scientific and technical industries.

On a three-month basis, the services sector grew by 0.6% on the back of a rise in retail and wholesale trading, bolstered by growth in food sales during the World Cup and hot weather.

Constructi­on also performed strongly, rising 0.5% in July on the back of stronger than usual growth in housebuild­ing for this time of year.

It sent constructi­on output to a record high, with the sector growing 3.3% on a three-month basis.

The pound was positive on the news, up 0.15% on the US dollar to trade at 1.293, and rising 0.2% versus the euro to 1.118.

Commenting on the figures, the Office for National Statistics’ head of GDP Rob Kent-Smith said: “Growth in the economy picked up in the three months to July.

“However, production fell back, with manufactur­ing again slipping a little, while energy generation and supply fell due to reduced demand.

“The dominant service sector again led economic growth in the month of July, with engineers, accountant­s and lawyers all enjoying a busy period, backed up by growth in constructi­on, which hit another record high level.”

A 0.2% contractio­n in manufactur­ing dragged on production growth, which was up just 0.1% in July.

The agricultur­al sector also shrank 0.1%.

Howard Archer, chief economic adviser to the EY ITEM Club, said the overall economic performanc­e in July could put the UK on track to beat expectatio­ns for the third quarter of 2018.

He said: “We had expected GDP growth to be stable at 0.4% quarteron-quarter in the third quarter, but the July data mean there is a very real chance it could improve to 0.5% quarter-on-quarter.”

However, he does not believe the latest release sets the stage for a surprise interest rate rise by the Bank of England this Thursday.

“The Bank of England will highly likely regard GDP growth of 0.3% month-on-month in July and 0.6% on a three-month basis as justifying its decision to raise interest rates from 0.50% to 0.75% in August,” he said.

“We do not expect any more [rises in] interest rates until after the UK leaves the EU in March 2019, given the major uncertaint­ies that may occur in the run-up to the UK’s departure.”

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