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UK seen to enter worst slump since lockdown

Drop will indicate a pause in recovery from pandemic

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LONDON: The UK economy probably shrank for the first time since the nation was in a coronaviru­s lockdown at the start of 2021, adding to pressure for action from the contenders vying to take over as prime minister.

Gross domestic product (GDP) for the second quarter probably shrank 0.2%, according to a survey of economists by Bloomberg News ahead of the official figures due to be published soon.

The drop would mark a pause in the recovery from the pandemic and the start of a more protracted downturn, which the Bank of England (BOE) expects to last into early 2024.

That outlook is roiling the race to replace Boris Johnson as leader of the ruling Conservati­ve Party and prime minister.

Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak, who are competing in the race set to conclude in September, spent the weekend promoting their ideas to help.

The central bank last week forecast that inflation will accelerate past a 40-year high to more than 13% this year, weighing heavily on consumer spending power.

Former prime minister Gordon Brown and the Boe’s former chief economist Charlie Bean this weekend added their voices pushing for an aid package that would help those hardest hit.

They said the measures Johnson’s government brought forward earlier this year aren’t enough.

“The main package for households was worth about £15bil (Rm80.6bil), and there is

certainly a case for something of at least that magnitude again,” Bean said in an interview on Times Radio.

Brown called for an emergency budget, warning that almost half of all households will tip into fuel poverty this winter because of a surge in the cost of electricit­y and natural gas.

“A financial time bomb will explode for families in October as a second round of fuel price rises in six months sends shock waves through every household and pushes millions over the edge,” Brown wrote in the Observer newspaper.

The remarks and the outlook for rising natural gas prices add to the pressure on Truss and Sunak to explain what they would do to revive the economy.

Truss, the frontrunne­r, has said she’d push through immediate tax cuts to help.

Sunak, the former chancellor of the exchequer, said those measures would take too long to implement and wouldn’t help enough of those most in need.

A Yougov poll published on the front page of the latest edition of the Times, which is backing Sunak, suggested that most voters would rather the next prime minister focus on tackling inflation and the looming cost-ofliving crisis rather than slashing taxes.

The economic backdrop is deteriorat­ing rapidly as the surge in inflation makes businesses and consumers more cautious about spending.

The GDP report probably will show that the economy shrank 1.2% in June alone.

And this was held back in part by bank holidays to mark Queen Elizabeth II’S jubilee.

The BOE warned last week that the UK probably will enter recession in the fourth quarter of this year.

It added that the economy will keep shrinking for the whole of next year.

Energy prices are the biggest factor weighing on households.

Starting in October, utilities will be allowed to charge £4,000 (US$4,860 or RM21,502) a year for the average power and gas bill, the highest level ever and almost four times the level of a year ago.

The BOE last week said gas futures were now about double the level they were in May, triggering a big increase in the central bank’s outlook for inflation.

Truss spent the weekend drawing attention to her vow for an immediate tax reduction and said that measure could help prevent a recession.

“I do not believe in resigning our great country to managed decline or accepting the inevitabil­ity of a recession,” Truss wrote in the Sunday Telegraph.

“I would use this to tackle the cost-of-living crisis by cutting taxes, reversing the rise on national insurance and suspending the green levy on energy bills.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Crisis mode: Customers shop for food items inside a Tesco supermarke­t in east London. The UK’S economic backdrop is deteriorat­ing rapidly as the surge in inflation makes consumers more cautious about spending.
— AFP Crisis mode: Customers shop for food items inside a Tesco supermarke­t in east London. The UK’S economic backdrop is deteriorat­ing rapidly as the surge in inflation makes consumers more cautious about spending.

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