The Independent

Pound falls as OBR says economy to shrink by 2%

- ALASTAIR JAMIESON

The pound fell sharply yesterday after Jeremy Hunt’s autumn statement revealed a painful era of austerity ahead, while the fiscal watchdog forecast Britain’s economy will shrink by 2 per cent over a lengthy recession. It was the second time in a row that the currency fell against the US dollar after a Budget, losing more than 1 per cent by the end of the day’s trading.

Shares also fell, the FTSE 100 Index 0.7 per cent closing lower at 7301.8, while gilts – UK government bonds that were at the centre of the recent mini-Budget market chaos – edged up slightly in a sign of investor concerns over the economic prospects. Mike Owens, senior sales trader at Saxo UK, said that while the pound has recovered since Rishi Sunak became prime minister, the chancellor’s statement “neverthele­ss paints a bleak picture of the state of the UK economy”.

Government debt is set to balloon £400bn higher than previously expected, warned the fiscal watchdog as it unveiled a bleak outlook for the UK economy.

The Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) said the economy is already in recession and will shrink further next year because of sky-high inflation. It said squeezed incomes, higher interest rates and tumbling house prices – which it expects to drop by 9 per cent by 2024 – are all set to contribute to a recession lasting “just over a year”.

The official forecaster downgraded previous projection­s that the economy would actually grow by 1.8 per cent in 2023 to a fall of 1.4 per cent for the year. Growth expectatio­ns for the following year were also downgraded in the face of continued inflationa­ry pressure. It has, however, slightly upgraded the total economic growth expected this year to 4.2 per cent from 3.8 per cent in the March statement.

There is a high probabilit­y that real GDP outturn will prove lower than the OBR’s forecast, while inflation remains stickier in the short term, adding to the government’s expense

Yael Selfin, KPMG UK

The OBR has also predicted that inflation will hit an average rate of 9.1 per cent this year and 7.4 per cent in 2023. Previously, forecasts had indicated inflation of 4 per cent next year. The Bank of England has repeatedly hiked interest rates during this year in an effort to drag down inflation, with rates jumping to 3 per cent earlier this month.

The OBR said higher interest rates had a significan­t impact on government debt, which it said is now expected to be £400bon higher – roughly 18 per cent of the size of UK GDP – in 2026-27 than it forecast in March.

Unemployme­nt is also expected to jump over the next two years, according to the forecasts. The rate of unemployme­nt is set to lift from 3.6 per cent to 4.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2024. This would mean a 505,000 increase in unemployed individual­s from 1.2 million now to a peak of 1.7 million.

The OBR’s latest forecasts have been long awaited after the official forecastin­g body was not used during the September mini-Budget, led by former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng. Economists partially linked the shock to the pound and bond yields following the mini-Budget announceme­nt to a lack of visibility on the impact of the previous government’s fiscal plan.

Yesterday, some economists questioned the outlook from the OBR, which was largely more upbeat in the medium term than the Bank of England’s latest economic forecasts.

Martin Beck, chief economic adviser to the EY Item Club, said: “With the OBR delivering a poor prognosis for the economy’s prospects, the fiscal position is expected to face challenges accordingl­y, with substantia­l upward revisions to public borrowing over the next five years.

“But the EY Item Club thinks the OBR’s forecast is potentiall­y too downbeat. The OBR’s numbers are conditione­d on interest rates rising to 5 per cent, a level which the official forecaster predicts would contribute to inflation falling below zero in 2025. A lower rate assumption, and one consistent with the Bank of England’s 2 per cent inflation target, would mean a better growth outlook.”

Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said: “The revised set of targets outlined by the chancellor in the autumn statement to secure markets’ confidence in the sustainabi­lity of UK public finances may not be as easily met, given that the OBR forecasts have been relatively generous. There is a high probabilit­y that real GDP outturn will prove lower than the OBR’s forecast, while inflation remains stickier in the short-term, adding to the government’s expense.”

Fall in living standards ushered in as Hunt delivers ‘grim’ economic outlook

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 ?? L ?? After de l ivering his autumn statement, Jeremy Hunt met pupi l s at St Jude’s Church of Eng and Primary Schoo l in south London (PA)
L After de l ivering his autumn statement, Jeremy Hunt met pupi l s at St Jude’s Church of Eng and Primary Schoo l in south London (PA)
 ?? ?? The Independen­t Daily Edition
The Independen­t Daily Edition

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