Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UK registers deepest recession among top economies

The British economy contracted for a second quarter in a row, sinking into a recession and shrinking by a record 20.4% between April and June, the largest drop reported by any other major economy

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THE BRITISH economy has recorded the deepest coronaviru­srelated slump among the world’s leading industrial economies after official figures yesterday showed it shrinking by a fifth in the second quarter alone.

The 20.4% quarter-on-quarter drop in the April to June period is worse than anything since records began in 1955, the Office for National Statistics said.

Following a 2.2% contractio­n in the first three months of the year, the U.K. economy is now in recession, commonly defined as two quarters of contractio­n.

Britain’s recession is deeper than those recorded by comparable economies in Europe, notably Germany, France and Italy, or that of the United States. The other Group of Seven economies, Japan and Canada, have yet to post second-quarter numbers but no economist thinks they will be as bad as the U.K.’s.

Kallum Pickering, senior economist at Berenberg Bank, said the main reason why the U.K. economy has fared so badly is that the lockdown was introduced at “a later stage” in the outbreak, particular­ly when compared with others in Europe.

By the time Prime Minister Boris Johnson introduced the lockdown on March 23, the U.K. had “a bigger first wave” than could have otherwise been the case, meaning restrictio­ns had to persist for relatively longer. Shops in Germany, for example, reopened on May 6 compared with June 15 in England.

The U.K. has the highest official coronaviru­s-related death toll in Europe with 46,611 deaths. The actual death toll is believed to be higher as the official dataset only incorporat­es those who have tested positive for COVID-19.

Unlike others, Britain’s statistics agency provides monthly growth figures and these offer hope that the economy is healing as lockdown restrictio­ns are eased. In June, the British economy grew by a monthly 8.7%.

“The economy began to bounce back in June with shops reopening, factories beginning to ramp up production and house-building continuing to recover,” said statistici­an Jonathan Athow.

The British government hopes additional measures such as the reopening of pubs and restaurant­s and a return to offices will further fuel the recovery.

However, Samuel Tombs, senior U.K. economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, thinks the U.K. economy will “lag” others because of “structural disadvanta­ges,” notably the fact that the economy is so dependent on the services sector, where human interactio­ns are so much more crucial than in manufactur­ing or constructi­on.

Whatever the scale of the bounceback in the coming months, it’s almost inevitable that unemployme­nt will sky-rocket, potentiall­y more than doubling to the 3 million mark last seen in the 1980s.

“I’ve said before that hard times were ahead, and today’s figures confirm that hard times are here,” said Treasury chief Rishi Sunak. “Hundreds of thousands of people have already lost their jobs, and sadly in the coming months many more will.”

So far, the British government has kept a lid on the official unemployme­nt numbers, through a salary support package that has given hard-pressed firms the opportunit­y to retain workers rather than fire them.

Under the Coronaviru­s Job Retention Scheme, the government has been paying a large chunk of the salaries of workers retained. Some 1.2 million employers have taken advantage of the program to furlough 9.6 million people at a cost to the government of 33.8 billion pounds ($44 billion).

Sunak is ending the program in October but insists “nobody will be left without hope or opportunit­y.”

Unions are urging him to extend the program to sectors still suffering from restrictio­ns.

“The best way to get our economy back on its feet is to keep people in work,” said Frances O’Grady, general secretary at the umbrella Trades Union Congress.

The British economy faces further headwinds aside from the pandemic, notably its future trading relationsh­ip with the European Union following the U.K.’s departure from the bloc in January.

The U.K. is currently in a transition period whereby it remains part of the EU’s tariff-free arrangemen­ts until the end of the year. The future economic relationsh­ip has yet to be agreed, meaning tariffs could be imposed on traded goods between the two sides come the start of next year.

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s wearing face masks pass the Bank of England in London, Britain, March 11, 2020.
Pedestrian­s wearing face masks pass the Bank of England in London, Britain, March 11, 2020.

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