Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Economic growth ‘slows to a crawl’ as demand weakens

- HENRY SAKER-CLARK wdp@reachplc.com

UK private sector growth “slowed to a crawl” in July as weaker customer demand and staff shortages weighed on industry, according to new figures.

The closely followed S&P Global/CIPS flash UK composite purchasing managers index (PMI) report showed a reading of 52.8 for July, dropping from a 53.7 reading for June.

The reading represente­d a new 17-month low.

Neverthele­ss, it was slightly above the prediction­s over a consensus of economists who had forecast 52.5 for the month.

The survey of UK business showed a slowdown in output growth driven by “softer demand”.

As a result, the manufactur­ing sector saw activity decline for the first month since May 2020 as goods producers blamed a lack of new work to replace completed orders.

Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce, said: “UK economic growth slowed to a crawl in July, registerin­g the slowest expansion since the lockdowns of early-2021.

“Although not yet in decline, with pent-up demand for vehicles and consumer-oriented services such as travel and tourism helping to sustain growth in July, the PMI is now at a level consistent with just 0.2% GDP growth.

“Forward-looking indicators suggest worse is to come.

“Manufactur­ing order books are now deteriorat­ing for the first time in one-and-a-half years as inflows of new work are insufficie­nt to keep workforces busy, which is usually a precursor to output and jobs being cut in coming months.”

The new report also highlighte­d that slowing overall activity in July was partly caused by “ongoing capacity constraint­s arising from shortages of materials and staff”.

Neverthele­ss, the services sector continued to outperform other areas of industry, although its own growth slowed slightly.

Firms revealed that cost inflation eased for the second consecutiv­e month to bring monthly cost rises to a 10-month low, with the easing particular­ly notable among manufactur­ing firms.

As a result, there was also a slowdown in increases to the prices charged by companies to their customers.

Forward-looking indicators suggest worse is to come CHRIS WILLIAMSON

Duncan Brock, group director at CIPS (Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply), said: “Private sector firms left little to get excited about in July with the softest rise in activity since February 2021 but there was a scrap of improvemen­t in some areas that offered light relief. The rise in input costs was the lowest since September 2021 with a slight stabilisat­ion in fuel costs and some commodity prices had started to drop.”

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