Investment - Articles - GDP growth grinding to a halt as Budget uncertainty looms


Comment from Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter the latest UK GDP statistics: “After a positive first half of the year, UK economic growth is slowly grinding to a halt once again, with GDP failing to grow month-on-month in July, and slowing to just 0.2% on a three-monthly basis.

 This increase was driven primarily by the services and construction sectors, but production output fell by 1.3%. However, growth is slowing in these sectors and is likely the result of actions taken by the Labour government now being realised, with the increase in employer national insurance contributions having a significant impact on business confidence.

 “With the summer now over and the economy supposedly getting out of its slumber, we now face continuing uncertainty in the lead up to the budget in November given the precarious position the Chancellor finds the public finances in. It is estimated that the fiscal hole that needs to be plugged is anywhere between £20bn and £50bn. While that is a wide range, it means one thing for a government that has shown it will struggle to cut spending – more tax rises.

 “Speculation is already rife about which taxes will be raised, and without the ability to raise the main revenue generators – income tax, national insurance and VAT – the government is left with targeting multiple sectors for small amounts of revenue. This is increasing the headwinds for the UK economy and with still over two months to go, GDP readings for the second half of the year are unlikely to pretty reading. For government under as much pressure as it is at the moment, this will be a very difficult corner to get itself out of.”

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Millions of last minute filers face potential CGT hurdle
HMRC are expecting a tax return from over 12 million people for the 2024/25 tax year, according to their latest figures. But 5.65 million, or almost h
US action in Venezuela a geopolitical shock but markets calm
Rathbones and IG comment on US action in Venezuela which is a geopolitical shock but with limited market ripples
10 key last minute checks for your tax return
Your tax return for the 2024 to 2025 tax year is due by midnight on 31 January 2026. 5.65 million people haven’t filed their self-assessment tax retur

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.