The National - News

Full year of coronaviru­s lockdowns takes toll of £251bn from British economy

- ALICE HAINE

A year of Covid-19 lockdowns has cost the UK economy £251 billion ($347.62bn), equal to nearly twice the annual output of Scotland, according to a new report.

The Centre for Economics and Business Research’s study showed that coronaviru­s was the main cause of the £251bn reduction in the UK’s gross value added figure.

This measures the total value of goods and services that are produced by the economy minus the costs of inputs and raw materials required to deliver them.

“To highlight the scale of this loss in activity, this reduction is roughly equivalent in size to the entire annual output of the south-east, in pre-Covid circumstan­ces, and nearly twice the output of Scotland,” said Sam Miley, economist at Cebr.

A year ago this week, workplaces, shops and businesses across the UK shut their doors, with office employees forced to work remotely to help curb the spread of Covid-19.

Twelve months on and parts of the UK have endured three lockdowns. Widespread uncertaint­y for many people and businesses and government interventi­on have become the norm for the economy.

“Consumer footfall has plummeted, businesses are still shut and many individual­s have found themselves out of work,” Mr Miley said.

“These factors, among countless others, have entailed a huge cost to the UK economy, in addition to the devastatin­g cost of thousands of lost lives.”

The crisis caused the economy to contract by almost 10 per cent last year – the largest decline in 300 years – while gross domestic product was 9 per cent below its February 2020 level last month, according

to the Office for National Statistics. Meanwhile, the total cost of dealing with Covid-19 is expected to hit £407bn owing to the large bill for job support measures, with the government already shelling out

£352bn of that figure to protect livelihood­s.

The Covid-19 losses across the country were the highest in London, with £51.4bn of lost activity in the capital, the Cebr study found.

This was followed by the south-east and east of England, with losses of £34.7bn and £26.6bn, respective­ly.

Despite the grim figures, Mr Miley said the economy is still expected to return to pre-pandemic levels of output in the next 12 months.

However, some regions may be subject to lingering effects

of the pandemic, such as higher rates of joblessnes­s and a greater degree of business closures.

“If the government is truly committed to addressing regional imbalance, it will not allow these areas to disproport­ionately bear the weight of the losses brought on by the pandemic,” Mr Miley said. “To do otherwise would risk further divergence in fortunes.”

Separately, a new report from the Resolution Foundation showed that pay fell for half of all UK workers in real terms last year.

The research group said yesterday that the plight of those hit hardest by the pandemic – mainly the younger generation – contrasts with official data showing a sharp rebound in average earnings after the first coronaviru­s lockdown last spring.

The disparity is owing to the disproport­ionate impact of the crisis. It has destroyed hundreds of thousands of jobs in sectors such as retail and hospitalit­y, where workers are often younger and low-paid.

The number of jobs furloughed through the Job Retention

Scheme rose to 4.8 million in the first quarter of this year, while government figures, set to be published today, are expected to show wage growth accelerati­ng to a 13-year high.

This indicates that the average person who remains in employment is receiving a higher salary than before the outbreak of the crisis.

However, the Resolution Foundation said the damage to the incomes of the young could scar their prospects for years to come, with weak pay likely to continue beyond the end of this year.

The number of jobs furloughed through the Job Retention Scheme rose to 4.8 million in the first quarter of this year

 ?? Reuters ?? Closed shops in London. A year ago this week, workplaces and businesses across the country shut their doors to help curb the spread of Covid-19
Reuters Closed shops in London. A year ago this week, workplaces and businesses across the country shut their doors to help curb the spread of Covid-19

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