Kuwait Times

British economy takes 25% hit from COVID

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LONDON: Britain’s economy shrank by a quarter over March and April as entire sectors were shuttered by the coronaviru­s lockdown in what looks likely to be the bottom of a “catastroph­ic” crash before a long and slow recovery.

Dwarfing previous downturns, the economy contracted by 20.4 percent in April from March, when it shrank by nearly 6 percent. It was 24.5 percent smaller than in April 2019. Both of April’s readings represente­d bigger falls than the dire forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists.

The Office for National Statistics said the economy had shrunk back to its size in 2002.

“This is catastroph­ic, literally on a scale never seen before in history,” Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank, said. “The real issue is what happens next.” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the figures were no surprise as Britain’s huge services sector was being hit particular­ly hard by social distancing measures, but he said a recovery would follow.

“Coronaviru­s is likely to hit a country like the UK economical­ly very hard. We depend on services, on human contact,” he said. “But we’re also a very resilient and a dynamic economy and we will bounce back.” Much of Britain’s retail sector is due to open its doors next week and the government last month urged people who could not do their jobs at home to return to work. “Take action”

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey who has warned of the deepest recession in three centuries - said there had been signs of recovery since April’s “dramatic” fall but the big question was how much long-term economic damage would be done. “We hope that will be as small as possible but we have to be ready and ready to take action, not just the Bank of England but more broadly, on what we can do to offset those longer term damaging effects,” he said.

The BoE is expected to announce a fresh increase of at least 100 billion pounds ($126 billion) in its bond-buying firepower next week. Finance minister Rishi Sunak is considerin­g what further stimulus measures he needs to provide.

The Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t said this week that Britain could suffer the worst downturn among the countries it covers, with an 11.5 percent slump this year. IFS director Johnson told Sky News the hit might be short, if the roughly one third of private sector employees who are temporaril­y laid off can return to work, consumers go out and spend again and Britain avoids a second COVID-19 wave. But he said it was more likely that unemployme­nt would jump when the government’s wage subsidy scheme ended in October, and that Britain would limp into 2021 with the risk of a Brexit shock also on the horizon.

Britain left the European Union at the end of January and began a no-change transition period which lasts for the rest of 2020. Talks on a broad new deal have made little progress. The ONS said output in the dominant services sector fell by 19 percent in April from March while manufactur­ing was down more than 24 percent and constructi­on crashed by 40 percent.

In the three months to April, the overall economy contracted by 10.4 percent from the previous three-month period.

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