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UK incomes see sluggish growth | UK incomes see sluggish growth |
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Real disposable incomes in the UK grew just 0.2% in the third quarter of 2017 as the weak pound continued to fuel inflation, official figures indicate. | Real disposable incomes in the UK grew just 0.2% in the third quarter of 2017 as the weak pound continued to fuel inflation, official figures indicate. |
Consumer spending went up 1% in the July-to-September period, the lowest rise for more than five years, the Office for National Statistics said. | Consumer spending went up 1% in the July-to-September period, the lowest rise for more than five years, the Office for National Statistics said. |
The pound has fallen in value since the UK voted to leave the EU, making imported goods more expensive. | The pound has fallen in value since the UK voted to leave the EU, making imported goods more expensive. |
The UK's GDP grew 0.4% in the quarter, unchanged from the previous estimate. | The UK's GDP grew 0.4% in the quarter, unchanged from the previous estimate. |
Latest figures show that inflation hit 3.1% in November, but pay rises are failing to keep up, with average weekly wages up by 2.3% in the three months to October from a year earlier. | |
The chief executive of Sainsbury's, Mike Coupe, said that despite that discrepancy, the supermarket chain was "not seeing a massive change in behaviour" on the part of its customers. | |
"Spending has been broadly flat year on year - maybe ticked down very, very slightly," he told the BBC. | |
The ONS added that UK households' expenditure had exceeded income for four quarters in a row, suggesting that people are dipping into savings to fund their spending. | The ONS added that UK households' expenditure had exceeded income for four quarters in a row, suggesting that people are dipping into savings to fund their spending. |
It said it was the first time since current records began in 1987 that this had happened over such a long period of time. | It said it was the first time since current records began in 1987 that this had happened over such a long period of time. |
'No collapse' | |
The 0.4% GDP growth figure for the third quarter is better than the 0.3% rate recorded in the first and second quarters, but weaker than the final three months of 2016, when economic growth of 0.6% was recorded. | |
"The UK's performance has been rather better than the gloomy talk would suggest," said Ian Stewart, chief economist at Deloitte. | |
"Growth has come in stronger than expected a year ago and the pace of activity has edged up since July. | |
"A whopping sterling devaluation certainly has squeezed spending power and incomes, just as you'd expect, but it's also helped reboot manufacturing output. | |
"Overall, growth has slowed modestly, not collapsed. Talk of an end to UK growth has been somewhat exaggerated." | |
Earlier this week, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) cut its UK economic growth forecast, blaming Brexit uncertainty. | |
The IMF expects UK growth of 1.6% this year, down slightly from its previous forecast of 1.7%. It expects growth to slow further next year, to 1.5%. | |
In a separate release, the ONS said that the UK's dominant services sector grew 0.2% month-on-month in October, the first month of the final quarter of 2017. |