BusinessMirror

Londoners escape worst of inflation crisis with big salary increases

- By Lucy White & Tom Rees

LONDON residents ware weathering the cost-ofliving crunch better than people in the rest of the UK, one research group concluded.

Residents of the capital saw their real wages adjusted for inflation slip by £9 ($11.13) a week compared to a year ago during the fourth quarter of 2022, research from the Centre for Economics and Business Research indicates.

At the other end of the scale, Northern Ireland saw real wages slide by £26 per week. The average across the UK was £19, CEBR said.

The figures emphasized the widening wealth gap between London and the rest of the UK. Part of this was to do with wage growth accelerati­ng faster in the capital than elsewhere, surpassing 8 percent.

Added to that, modeling from the CEBR based on regional disparitie­s in spending patterns implied that areas outside the capital—especially Northern Ireland and Scotland—were suffering the highest level of inflation.

The figures follow official data showing the UK’S poorest regions were also hit by the highest rates of ill health and people dropping out of the workforce.

This will pile pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government to reduce inequality across the country—part of a “leveling up” program that the previous Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed would be a “defining mission” of his premiershi­p.

Improving public health imbalances would be important “not only to the individual, but also to the economy as a whole,” said Karl Thompson, an economist at CEBR.

Wales, Yorkshire, and the West Midlands also had the lowest shares of residents who said in the 2021 Census that they are healthy, said Thompson.

“Though there are several factors at play, lower real earnings imply lower living standards and therefore often fewer resources available to lead a healthy lifestyle,” Thompson said.

During his premiershi­p in 2021, Johnson unveiled the £4.8 billion Leveling Up Fund backed by the taxpayer, which would invest in infrastruc­ture across the UK.

Just last week, the government revealed a list of 111 projects that will receive a share of the £2.1 billion handed out in the fund’s second round. Those include a new rail link in Cornwall and an artificial­intelligen­ce campus in Blackpool.

But as Leveling Up minister Michael Gove prepares to speak at the Convention of the North in Manchester on Wednesday, he may be forced to defend the pace of the government’s actions.

A separate study from forecastin­g group the EY Item Club today warned that Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s plan to tighten the public purse strings will deepen the UK’S recession.

The Item Club is predicting output will shrink by 0.7 percent this year, a decline from the 0.3 percent contractio­n it previously penciled in last October.

It thinks stubbornly high inflation, rising interest rates and more restrictiv­e fiscal policy will all weigh on the economy.

Corporatio­n tax is set to rise from 19 percent to 25 percent in April, and the boost from the government’s temporary “super-deduction” on taxes incurred through business investment will fall away.

“The UK is really the only major global economy that is cutting back spending and raising taxes in the face of a slow economy,” said Peter Arnold, UK economist at accountanc­y firm Ernst & Young LLP. “That does explain why we see the prospects being a little bit weaker.”

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