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UK economic growth sped up ahead of Brexit vote | UK economic growth sped up ahead of Brexit vote |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The UK economy grew by 0.6% in the three months to the end of June, as economic growth accelerated in the run-up to the vote to leave the EU. | The UK economy grew by 0.6% in the three months to the end of June, as economic growth accelerated in the run-up to the vote to leave the EU. |
Second-quarter gross domestic product grew faster than expected, up from 0.4% growth in the previous quarter, the Office for National Statistics said. | |
Any uncertainty ahead of last month's referendum seemed "limited", ONS said. | |
However, by far the strongest growth was in April, followed by a sharp easing off in May and June. | |
On a yearly basis the economy grew by a healthy 2.2%. | |
The pick-up in economic activity was boosted by the biggest upturn in industrial output since 1999, particularly from car factories and pharmaceutical firms. | |
'Position of strength' | 'Position of strength' |
ONS chief economist Joe Grice said the industrial gains were reinforced by "strong growth across the services sector, particularly retailing". | |
"Any uncertainties in the run-up to the referendum seem to have had a limited effect," he said. "Very few respondents to ONS surveys cited such uncertainties as negatively impacting their businesses." | |
Economists, including those at the Bank of England, had estimated second-quarter growth would be about 0.5%. | Economists, including those at the Bank of England, had estimated second-quarter growth would be about 0.5%. |
Chancellor Philip Hammond said the better-than-expected figures showed the fundamentals of the UK economy were "strong". | |
"It is clear we enter our negotiations to leave the EU from a position of economic strength," Mr Hammond said. | |
But John McDonnell, Labour's shadow chancellor, said the figures bore little relation to workers' economic position: "Today's GDP figures provide a stark contrast with the grim news on real earnings which remain 10% below their 2007 level. | |
"The Tories' failed austerity policy has produced a lost decade for earnings with ordinary households experiencing the worst decline in living standards in living memory." | |
Industrial output, including manufacturing, grew by 2.1% in the quarter. The services sector, the largest part of the UK economy, grew 0.5%, while construction and agriculture fell 0.4% and 1% respectively. | |
In April industrial production jumped 2.1% month-on-month, but then dropped 0.5% in May and rose only 0.2% in June. | |
Services also started the quarter strongly, rising 0.6% in April, before dropping 0.1% in May and growing only 0.1% in June. | |
'Brexit concerns' | |
Analysts and business groups warned against using the second-quarter figures - which only included estimates of one week following the 23 June referendum - to measure the impact of the Brexit result. | |
Ben Brettell, senior economist at Hargreaves Lansdown said: "It's always difficult to tell where you're going by looking in the rear-view mirror, and as such today's GDP figures can't be taken as evidence of the current climate. | |
"However, what they do show is an absence of pre-Brexit concerns, meaning that if the forecast downturn does materialise, at least we start from a position of relative strength." | |
'Bogeyman' | |
A snapshot of the economy in the weeks after the referendum, from the closely-watched Purchasing Managers Indexes (PMIs), suggested there had been a sharp fall in economic activity following the Leave vote. | |
The British Chambers of Commerce said it was "far too soon to draw firm conclusions" about the UK's future growth prospects. | |
"The significant contribution made by the manufacturing sector is particularly encouraging, but the improvements were from a low base, and the UK economy remains reliant on the service sector to drive growth," the BCC said. | |
The economy seems to be heading towards a "significant deterioration" in the second half of 2016, according to the National Institute of Economic and Social Research. | |
Connor Campbell, an analyst at Spreadex, agreed, saying: "Just because predictions of a slowdown pre-referendum appear to have been false, last week's early glimpse at the Markit PMIs shows that the post-Brexit impact is in no way a bogeyman conjured by bitter Vote Remainers." | |
The ONS figures are the first calculation of second-quarter economic activity and are based on less than half the data that will give the eventual figure. | |
The best quality data covers the earliest part of the quarter, but June's figures are based largely on forecasts. |