The Jerusalem Post

British economy on track for unpreceden­ted contractio­n

- • By DAVID MILLIKEN

LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s economy is on course for an unpreceden­ted 7% quarterly contractio­n after measures to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s forced company closures across the country last month, a business survey showed on Tuesday.

Adding to the bleak mood, figures earlier in the day showed monthly car sales had dropped to their lowest since 1946 due to the closure of showrooms, while around a quarter of workers are now on a government-funded furlough.

IHS Markit said its Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the services sector fell to its lowest since the survey started in 1996, dropping to 13.4 in April from 34.5 in March, only a fraction better than an initial flash estimate of 12.3.

Last week’s manufactur­ing PMI was similarly dire and IHS Markit said that, taken together, they pointed to the deepest economic downturn “in living memory.”

A composite PMI of the two sectors dropped to a recordlow 13.8 in April from 36.0 in March, far below the 50 mark that divides growth from contractio­n, indicating a 7% quarterly fall in gross domestic product, the global informatio­n provider said.

“We expect that the actual decline in GDP could be even greater,” IHS Markit economist Tim Moore said.

Britain’s services PMI does not include retailers, who have been hardest hit by store closures since the March 23 lockdown, or many of the self-employed.

Howard Archer, economist for forecaster­s EY ITEM Club, said he expected GDP to fall by around 13% in the second quarter, assuming some lifting of restrictio­ns.

Economies across the world have been battling the economic consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Flash eurozone PMI data also hit a record low last month, and final figures are due on Wednesday.

Also last month, government budget forecaster­s set out a scenario under which the British

economy could contract as much as 35% in the three months until June due to the lockdown, and for annual output to fall by the most it has in more than 300 years.

Britain’s government will review the lockdown this week, but so far ministers have said it is too soon to relax restrictio­ns to stem the pandemic that has claimed more than 32,000 lives, according to British data published on Tuesday – surpassing Italy as the country with the worst death toll in Europe.

Britons have been told to stay at home except for exercise, essential shopping, some types of work and a small number of other reasons. The only businesses that reported doing well in the services PMI were those supporting online shopping, government contracts or financial services.

The services PMI showed a small rise in business expectatio­ns to 53.2 in April from a record-low 47.9 in March, which IHS Markit said reflected firms’ hopes that they would be allowed to reopen by the summer.

“However, service providers looking to re-establish business operations overwhelmi­ngly commented that capacity would remain well below previous levels for an extended period, and any timings remain highly uncertain,” IHS Markit’s Moore said.

Samuel Tombs, an economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, said there were some signs the worst could be over, based on a recent pick-up in energy usage and the number of people driving further afield, though recovery would be slow.

“With several sectors of the economy set to remain closed for business throughout the summer, and consumers’ confidence torn to pieces by COVID19, we expect only about half of Q2’s huge drop in GDP to be reversed in Q3,” he said.

The government is discussing with company managers and trade unions how to allow more businesses to operate safely.

Under existing guidelines, stores such as supermarke­ts limit customer numbers and urge staff and shoppers to stay two meters apart.

 ?? (Dylan Martinez/Reuters) ?? AN EMPTY bus makes its way through the quiet streets, as London in late April is deserted at night like never before.
(Dylan Martinez/Reuters) AN EMPTY bus makes its way through the quiet streets, as London in late April is deserted at night like never before.

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