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20 Dec 2013
Europe Economic Research

UK: Wrapping a mixed bag of UK data

 
 
It's a mixed bag, and some of the messages strike us as likely to change through time, but we come away from this morning's batch of releases with a sense of disappointment. As much as the growth environment looks solid for now, and we expect the composition of demand and income to change in a way which supports sustainability through time, one cannot deny that the data in hand do raise questions about the underlying health of the expansion:
 
- GDP growth for 3Q was unrevised at 0.8% q/q sa, despite a large upward revision to construction output. We had expected an upward revision to 0.9% q/q sa, and weighting the quarterly percentage increases in sectoral output for the quarter we come to 0.855%, so this one must have been close in the rounding. The overall level of real GDP, however, has been revised up by 0.6% compared to the last release, thanks to revisions to GDP growth over 2012Q3 to 2013Q1. Remember the worries about triple dip early this year? 2013Q1 GDP is now shown having risen 0.5% q/q sa.
 
- The news on the composition of growth is mixed. The good news is that the upward revisions to recent business investment growth rates we have been anticipating are beginning to come through, with cumulative growth during 2013 now shown at 2.8% rather than the 0.5% reported previously. It is worth emphasising that at 2.0% q/q in 3Q real business investment was growing more than twice as fast as GDP as a whole, and we expect further signs of strength in business investment to be evident as we move through the coming months. The bad news is that consumption continues to look strong relative to income growth, and the current account deficit remains wide. Nominal household consumption grew by 1.7% q/q sa in 3Q, while nominal labour compensation grew by just 0.2%. This was enough to push the savings ratio down to 5.4% having averaged near 7% through 2009-12. Add spending on the housing stock to consumption, and the household sector is once again spending more than its total income and running a financial deficit.
 
- The balance of payments data report a very large 5.1% of GDP deficit for 2013Q3, even though the 2Q deficit was revised significantly smaller. The big picture in this data set remains that while the trade deficit is swinging around 2% of GDP (and swung beyond that in this release), swings in the investment income balance are driving both the quarterly noise and the worrying weakness in the trend. A high rate of earnings on UK financial assets abroad had been a key support to the balance of payments on a secular basis, and the erosion of the surplus on investment income is leaving a conspicuous hole.
 
- Given recent employment strength, a pop in 4Q GDP would go a long way to easing some of the current concerns on productivity. The index of services for October, however, showed growth of only 0.1% m/m sa and gives no sense that the official GDP series is going deliver a jump in 4Q. The weakness in the October data was relatively narrowly based, with a 7.1% m/m sa drop in the accommodation sector helping to pull the hotel, restaurant and distribution sector down. Given that the survey data remain solid and the monthly services data are very revision prone, we are not inclined to change our 4Q GDP estimate (0.9% q/q sa) at this stage, but the trajectory of the services data does shift risks on the prelim print to the downside.
 
- Public sector net borrowing came in £2bn higher than we expected at £16.5bn in November (this is on ex-financial interventions measure). Moreover, cumulative borrowing through to October was revised up by £2.6bn. Though we continue to think the bias is toward an undershoot of the £111bn deficit for 2013/14 projected by the OBR earlier this month, the November data suggest any undershoot is likely to be relatively small.
 
Apologies for the absence of charts, owing to IT issues.


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