UK economy grew by just 0.1% in July as Delta spread

Data has suggested the post-lockdown rebound in the economy lost momentum

Britain’s economy barely grew in July, rising by just 0.1 per cent from June, the weakest expansion since January when the country went back into strict Covid-19 lockdown rules, official data showed on Friday.

Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected month-on-month growth of 0.6 per cent in gross domestic product.

Britain saw a sharp increase in Covid-19 cases in July as the Delta variant of the coronavirus took hold, leading to hundreds of thousands of workers being ordered to stay at home under self-isolation rules which have been relaxed.

The Office for National Statistics said some businesses had complained of staff being unable to come to work because they were required to self-isolate and a fall in construction output was linked to post-lockdown problems in global supply chains.

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Britain’s dominant services sector was flat in July from June with output in consumer-facing services fell for the first time since January, driven mostly by a drop in the retail sector.

Industrial output grew by 1.2 per cent boosted by the return to production of an oil field but manufacturing was flat. Construction output fell by a monthly 1.6 per cent.

Previously released data had suggested the post-lockdown rebound in the economy lost momentum in July with retail sales and consumer borrowing both falling and businesses reporting a slowdown in growth, according to surveys of purchasing managers. – Reuters