British economy at weakest for 30 years
Britain’s economy is contracting at its sharpest pace in almost three
decades amid the worst global downturn since the 1930s, official data
showed Friday, but analysts said the worst is likely over.
British gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 1.9 percent during the
first quarter of 2009 compared with the final three months of last year,
according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The data was unchanged from an initial estimate it gave last month.
GDP shrank 4.1 percent in the first quarter compared with the first
three months of 2008, also unchanged from preliminary data, the ONS
added.
Both figures matched analysts’ consensus forecasts. “The good news is
that it is looking highly likely that the first quarter will have marked
the deepest rate of contraction in this recession,” said Howard Archer,
chief Britain economist at IHS Global Insight.
“There are mounting signs in the latest data and surveys that the
rate of economic contraction has moderated appreciably so far during the
second quarter as the combination of monetary and fiscal stimulus,
support to the banking sector and a very weak pound increasingly kick in
to support economic activity.
“Nevertheless, serious obstacles to economic recovery remain ...
recovery will develop only gradually in 2010, with relapses a serious
threat,” Archer warned.
The British economy shrank 1.6 percent in the last quarter of 2008,
while the 2009 first-quarter contraction was the sharpest since the
third quarter of 1979 — the year that Margaret Thatcher was elected
prime minister.
“The fall in second-quarter GDP — if indeed there is one — is likely
to be substantially smaller than the drops recorded in the fourth
quarter of last year and first quarter of this,” Credit Suisse analysts
wrote in a research note.
Economists have in recent weeks spoken about the emergence of ‘Green
Shoots’ of recovery as the world economy struggles with the worst global
slump since the 1930s Great Depression.
The ONS meanwhile added on Friday that British industrial output fell
5.3 percent in the first quarter compared with a drop of 4.5 percent
during the first three months of 2008.
In separate data, car production in Britain dived 55.3 percent in
April from a year earlier, the Society of Motor Manufacturers and
Traders said Friday.
“Despite the current difficulties, the UK must prepare for the return
of global growth and government support for the industry is an essential
part of the process,” SMMT chief executive Paul Everitt said.
Standard and Poor’s warned Thursday that the British economy’s
top-level ‘AAA’ credit rating was under threat and revised down its
outlook due to soaring public debt, sending financial markets reeling.
The international ratings agency said it downgraded the outlook to
“negative” from “stable” because of the country’s “deteriorating public
finances” as a result of the global recession.
Britain’s cherished ‘AAA’ sovereign credit rating is a mark of its
financial standing in the world so any downgrade would be a major blow
to morale and a serious concern for a government needing to raise money
on the international debt markets.
Official data Thursday showed Britain’s public deficit ballooned to a
record 8.5 billion pounds (9.6 billion euros, 13.22 billion dollars) in
April as the government bailed out banks and the recession slashed tax
revenues.
S&P added that the ratings could be downgraded following Britain’s
next general election that must be held by mid-2010 if a new government
does not take adequate measures to tackle the problem.
Polls indicate that the main opposition Conservatives are set to oust
Labour, led by Prime Minister Gordon Brown. LONDON, AFP |