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Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said she is “not satisfied” with the performance of the UK’s economy after it grew by a meagre 0.1 per cent in the three months to the end of September.
Economists had expected 0.2 per cent growth during the period – in itself hardly a stellar performance, and it comes after 0.5 per cent growth during the previous three months.
The growth figure is a problem because of the government’s dependency on a growing economy to gather more tax.
A growing economy means more profits for companies and growing personal incomes which, in turn, increases HM Revenue & Customs’ income, which will help pay for the improved NHS and other services Ms Reeves says she wants.
But her recent Budget may have cooled the appetites of households and businesses to spend, both before and after the event.
Danni Hewson at stock broker AJ Bell said: “Nervousness from households ahead of the Budget dampened consumer behaviour and even though the retail sector did pick up in a bit in September people were being cautious, especially when it came to those nice personal investments such as haircuts and manicures.”
In order to patch up government finances, Ms Reeves hiked tax for employers in the shape of employers National Insurance, despite warnings that doing so could curb wages. Big employers including retailers and pub chains have said prices could rise as a result.
“For business the spectre of higher taxes was already pushing many companies to employ a wait and see approach when it came to investment and hiring plans. The big question is what will happen to those plans now the dust has settled and the numbers have been crunched,” said Ms Hewson.
The Budget is only one part of it, with other factors such as extra costs associated with Brexit also cooling spending habits.
Ben Jones, lead economist at the Confederation of British Industry, agreed that uncertainty ahead of the Budget “probably played a big part”, after firms reported a slowdown in making spending decisions.
Another thing to bear in mind is the small nature of the move over a three-month period in the wider context of the economy.
Luke Bartholomew, deputy chief economist at the investment giant Abrdn, said it is “possible that this just represents normal monthly volatility rather than anything more fundamental”.
The move is unlikely to upend Ms Reeves’ spending plans, which include a 4.7 per cent rise in NHS and education expense, plus £2.9bn for defence and £1.3bn for councils.
Weaker growth can tempt the Bank of England into cutting interest rates to cut borrowing costs and give companies and mortgage holders more money to spend on other things.