Uk Economy Faces Deepest Downturn In Living Memory

Uk Economy Faces Deepest Downturn In Living Memory

By Ben Kerrigan-

The UK’s economy is facing  its deepest downturn “in living memory”, according to a survey from IHS Markit/CIPS .

The revelation comes as the British government revealed it is subsidising the wages of 6.3million workers under its furlough scheme. This is in addition nearly 2 million new claims for Universal credit, which has seen the unemployed given an extra £80 a month

IHS Markit said UK GDP could fall at a quarterly rate of 7%.or even greater even greater. Tim Moore, economics director at IHS Markit, said the data “highlights that the downturn in the UK economy during the second quarter of 2020 will be far deeper and more widespread than anything seen in living memory”.

“The April survey reading is consistent with the economy falling at a quarterly rate of approximately 7%, but we expect the actual decline in GDP could be even greater, in part because the PMI excludes the vast majority of the self-employed and the retail sector.”

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) services index showed a record-low reading of just 13.4 in April, down from 34.5 in March. A figure below 50 indicates contraction. The final reading was slightly better than a preliminary – or “flash” – estimate of 12.3 that had been produced late last month.

Markit said it was “by far the lowest recorded since the series began in 1998”. Purchasing managers – senior employees in businesses who keep across what is happening to a company’s orders and its supplies -see before anyone else if activity is slowing. Prior to the last two months, the survey’s record low stood at 40.1 in November 2008, the period of the credit crisis. Samuel Tombs, economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said any pick up throughout the summer would be weak.

“With several sectors of the economy set to remain closed for business throughout the summer, and consumers’ confidence torn to pieces by Covid-19, we expect only about half of the second quarter’s huge drop in GDP to be reversed in the third quarter.”

The Uk lockdown is costing the economy billions of dollars and ruining job prospects as well as destroying employment. It was seen as a necessary step to slow the spread of the deadly coronavirus which has so far accounted for thousands of lives in Britain.Boris Johnson is expected to announce a ‘road map’ to ease the draconian curbs on Sunday – but there seems little prospect of a significant loosening before the end of the month.

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