Home Estate Planning UK economy grew 0.1 per cent in August

UK economy grew 0.1 per cent in August

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The UK economy grew by 0.1 per cent in August, Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures have shown, with a struggling services sector in the month weighing down on output across the UK. 

The ONS data indicated on Wednesday morning the UK economy was set for a significant slowdown after an upswing in spending over the first half of the year. 

Fresh data showed the UK economy grew 0.3 per cent in the three months to August while monthly growth was the same as economists expected.

The figures may still leave Chancellor Rachel Reeves exposed to further criticism given Labour’s central mission is to grow the UK economy at a faster pace.  

The UK’s services sector, which makes up around 80 per cent of gross value added across the country, grew by 0.4 per cent over a three-month period while construction inched up 0.3 per cent. 

Official data also showed production fell 0.3 per cent in that time but grew on a monthly basis in August, which is likely to spark fears that industry was struggling with mounting costs from tax hikes and a weakened demand for products. 

“Economic growth increased slightly in the latest three months,” said Liz McKeown, director of economic statistics at the ONS.

“Services growth held steady, while there was a smaller drag from production than previously.”

Fresh data will intensify scrutiny over Labour’s growth efforts, with stagnation worries are expected to linger for the rest of the year. 

The UK economy enjoyed one per cent growth in the first half of the year. Economists have pointed out that firms had front-loaded investment and spending before April’s “Liberation Day” given fears tariffs would hit UK industry, with sluggish growth to follow as the year comes to a close. 

The ONS also revised figures for July as it said the UK economy declined 0.1 per cent in the month of July. 

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has admitted the UK economy was “stuck”. 

Reeves has also renewed calls in the last week for Cabinet members to focus on growth and stabilising inflation. 

UK economy set for lowest GDP per capita growth next year

Earlier this week, the International Monetary Fund upgraded its UK growth forecast for 2025 by 0.1 percentage point earlier this week, pointing to higher expenditure levels at the beginning of the year. 

But the IMF lowered its 2026 outlook as the average tariff rate is creeping back up. The UK was singled out for its exposure to a break-up in trading levels with the US. 

The UN body also said GDP per capita growth in the UK would be the lowest out of all G7 countries next year.

Several business confidence surveys have meanwhile pointed to fears businesses have of further tax hikes damaging investment prospects. 

As Reeves looks set to raise taxes by as much as £30bn at this year’s Budget, economists fear that a fiscal tightening could weigh on growth. 

The IFS has called on Reeves to build a bigger headroom at this November’s Budget to avoid having to return for more tax increases in future years. 

Barclays analysts, who contributed to the report, also said lowering inflation and committing to fiscal rules would be essential to keep public finances on stable footing, enabling growth hopes to be revived. 

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