Yorkshire Post

Services sector growth drags on the economy

- GREG WRIGHT DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR Email:greg.wright@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @gregwright­yp

SLUGGISH GROWTH from the UK economy looks set to continue into the third quarter after activity in the services sector sank to its lowest level in nearly a year last month.

The closely watched Markit/ CIPS services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) showed a reading of 53.2 in August, down from 53.8 in July and slightly below economists’ expectatio­ns of 53.5. A reading above 50 indicates growth.

The report said slow growth in new business sent activity in the dominant industry to its lowest level since September 2016.

Inflationa­ry pressures were also biting across the sector, with the Brexit-hit pound ratcheting up input costs to a six-month high.

Sterling was marginally down against the US dollar at 1.292 following the update, but the pound was 0.1 per cent ahead versus the euro at 1.087.

The outcome adds to a mixed performanc­e from the UK economy, with output at UK factories unexpected­ly pushing to a fourmonth high in August, while the constructi­on sector slipped to a one-year low for the month.

Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit, said the services sector had put the UK economy on course for third-quarter growth of 0.3 per cent, the same rate as the second quarter.

He said: “A summer slowdown was evident in the economy as the August PMI surveys showed slower rates of expansion in services and constructi­on offsetting an improved performanc­e in the manufactur­ing sector.

“The resulting overall expansion was the weakest for six months. Although the latest two months’ data put the economy on course for another 0.3 per cent expansion in the third quarter, momentum is being gradually lost.

“Robust manufactur­ing growth means the economy may be rebalancin­g towards goods production, aided by the weaker pound, but the slowdowns in services and constructi­on send warning signals about the health of the economy.

“In services, the weaker growth trend was most evident in consumer-facing sectors such as hotels and restaurant­s and other personal services, which includes businesses such as cinemas, gyms and hairdresse­rs.”

Despite the deeper-than-expected fall, the number of jobs created remained at healthy levels in August, picking up for the third month on the bounce and touching a 19-month high.

The move was driven by the largest rise in work backlogs since July 2015, forcing firms to take on more staff to tackle orders. Business confidence also reached a three-month high, but the level remained lower than before Britain voted to divorce from the European Union last year.

Duncan Brock, director of customer relationsh­ips at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply (CIPS), said yesterday: “Service providers negotiated their way through more uncertain times as the weak pound gave suppliers a reason to hike their charges.”

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