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Updated 2024-12-23 06:00
WTO slashes world trade forecast as manufacturing slowdown bites – as it happened
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as WTO warns that global economic fragmentation is hurting trade growth
‘It’s not done’: IMF head warns of cost of final victory in struggle against inflation
Kristalina Georgieva discusses protracted high interest rates and first term dominated by two unthinkable' eventsThe head of the International Monetary Fund has warned that victory in the fight against inflation could spell trouble for financial markets by forcing central banks to keep interest rates high until 2025.In a Guardian interview before next week's IMF annual meeting in Marrakech, Kristalina Georgieva said there was a risk of borrowing costs staying high for a protracted period, with knock-on effects for asset prices. Continue reading...
Firms will hesitate to invest in UK after Sunak’s climate U-turns, says Mark Carney
Former Bank of England governor says businesses prioritise countries with clean power and consistent strategies
Supply shortages and mortgage rate rises push UK rents to highest point ever
Average rental property receives three times more enquiries from prospective tenants than in 2019
UK 30-year borrowing costs hit highest since 1998 as bond market sell-off grips markets – as it happened
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as fears of high interest rates hit the bond market
What are bond yields and why are they at a 25-year high in UK?
Inflation expectations have pushed up government's long-term cost of borrowing, which is expected to slow economyBorrowing costs for governments around the world have risen to the highest level in decades as investors bet that stubbornly high inflation will force global central banks to leave interest rates higher for longer.UK 30-year bond yields - which dictate the country's long-term cost of borrowing - rose to the highest level since 1998 on Wednesday, surpassing the levels seen a year ago in the panic after Liz Truss's mini-budget. US Treasury yields have climbed to a 16-year high, while EU nations and Japanese government borrowing costs have also risen sharply. Continue reading...
Bond market sell-off sends UK long-term borrowing cost to 25-year high
Rate tops level last seen after Liz Truss mini-budget as fears of global inflation and US political instability spook markets
Tory conference unease grows over Sunak and Hunt’s lack of ambition
MPs express bafflement PM has resolved to do so little since steadying ship' after Truss's disastrous tenure
Central banks ‘risk global recession unless they relax 2% inflation targets’
Economic arm of UN says pro-growth stance needed, with interest rate rises increasing inequalityCentral banks risk tipping a stalling global economy into a full-blown recession unless they relax their 2% inflation targets and adopt a more pro-growth stance, the economic arm of the UN has warned.Pointing to evidence of a looming debt crisis in poor countries, the UN said the sharp rises in interest rates from the major central banks since 2021 had increased inequality and reduced investment but proved a blunt anti-inflation weapon. Continue reading...
London Underground strikes this week called off; pound hits six-month low against dollar – as it happened
RMT says planned strike action by over 3,000 members at London tube stations on Wednesday 4th and Friday 6th October will not go ahead.
Greggs keeps prices on hold as sales leap and it opens new shops
Britain's biggest bakery chain says cost inflation is easing, although staff costs are rising
UK food prices fall in September for first time in two years, figures show
Average food basket down by 0.1% amid fierce supermarket competition, says the British Retail ConsortiumFood prices dropped in the UK in September for the first month in almost two years, according to retail industry figures, offering consumers some respite amid the cost of living crisis.The British Retail Consortium (BRC) said price reductions for dairy, margarine, fish and vegetables and fierce supermarket competition helped to bring down the cost of an average food basket by 0.1% compared with the previous month. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak accused of presiding over ‘chaos’ as Tory conference braces for news of HS2 Manchester leg cancellation – as it happened
Andy Burnham, Labour mayor of Greater Manchester, says news would be profoundly depressing'In a report last week the Institute for Fiscal Studies said the current parliament was likely to mark a decisive and permanent shift to a higher-tax economy".In its report, it also said that although this was partly because of the pandemic, government decisions taken before Covid were a more important factor. It said:Only during and in the immediate aftermath of the two world wars have government revenues grown by as much as they have in the period since 2019. To some extent, this ought not to be a surprise: the Covid-19 pandemic represented the most significant economic dislocation since the second world war. But while the response to the pandemic and its after-effects does explain some of the tax rises announced in recent years, it is far from the only - or even the most significant - explanation. Instead, tax rises have largely been the consequence of a desire for higher government spending on things that pre-date the pandemic (such as manifesto promises to expand the NHS workforce and hire more police officers, and a September 2019 declaration to be turning the page on austerity').I disagree with that analysis. One of the biggest reasons that we've had to see taxes go up is because our debt interest payments have gone up as a result of the energy shock. That has an enormous pressure on the public purse.The other thing I disagree with the IFS on - normally I don't disagree with them, I do this time - is their suggestion this is a permanent rise in the level of taxation. I don't believe it has to be. If we are prepared to take difficult decisions about the way we spent taxpayers' money, to reform the deliver of public services, to reform the welfare state, there's a chance to bring taxes down. But there aren't any short cuts. Continue reading...
Sharon White stepping down from John Lewis; UK house prices fall at fastest rate since 2009 – as it happened
John Lewis chair Sharon White will not seek second term at retailer, as Nationwide reports UK house prices fell 5.3% in year to September
Rishi Sunak’s Commons majority in peril as 60 Tories join Liz Truss group
Growth Group now same size as government's majority, as it urges PM to cut taxes and resume fracking
UK house prices drop 5.3% with falls in every region, says Nationwide
High interest rates blamed for year-on-year fall with price of average home 14,500 lower than September 2022.UK house prices fell by 5.3% in the year to September, with drops in price in every region of the country as rising interest rates squeeze the market.The house price index by Nationwide, the biggest British building society, showed that seasonally adjusted prices stalled over the month in September, after a 0.8% drop in August. Continue reading...
As Britain’s town hall services crumble, the case for reform is overwhelming
Local government has been steadily squeezed by austerity, inflation and centralisation. Greater devolution is neededIn most of Britain's towns there are buildings hinting at a more prosperous past. Vast stone public libraries, swimming baths and theatres; all encircling the grand town halls that once controlled them. Many are long shut, converted or owned by someone else. But the symbolism remains - local government used to do stuff.Today, England's councils are in the worst crisis since the foundation stones of these municipal palaces were laid. Continue reading...
The Guardian view on Argentina’s presidential election: the danger to democracy is real | Editorial
Public spending hikes and pro-poor tax cuts might fix the economy and be popular enough to stop the far rightWith poverty rising, a recession approaching and annual inflation topping 120% in Argentina, it is unsurprising that voters are fed up. They would be forgiven for wanting change in the upcoming presidential election. However, voting for a far-right candidate, Javier Milei, would be a serious mistake. Mr Milei admires Donald Trump, trades in misogyny and says the outrageous to get noticed. Despite what Mr Milei claims, the Pope is not an emissary of the evil one" nor is the climate crisis a socialist lie".After winning Argentina's primary election this summer, Mr Milei is, depressingly, in pole position to clinch the presidency. His pitch is that Argentina's interventionist, welfarist economic model has failed. Mr Milei is a fan of the free market missionary Milton Friedman. He thinks inflation results from too much of the Argentinian currency, the peso, being in circulation. Mr Milei's solution is to shrink the state and replace the peso with the dollar. Friedman's ideas have been debunked. But they are held with religious fervour by adherents such as Mr Milei.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...
UK admits extra £330m a year in charges for post-Brexit animal and plant imports
Labour's Stella Creasy elicits confirmation of higher charges to firms, which some say risk further fuelling food inflationThe government has admitted it will cost businesses 330m each year in additional charges when new post-Brexit border controls on animal and plant products imported from the European Union are implemented next year.Lucy Neville-Rolfe, a minister of state in the Cabinet Office, confirmed the estimated annual cost adding that the UK needs tighter border controls to protect our international reputation" in a letter to Labour MP Stella Creasy, the chair of the Labour Movement for Europe. Continue reading...
Tory swing voters switch to Labour after Sunak’s green retreat, poll finds
Survey shows nearly 90% of 2019 Conservative voters say green industry is vital to UK's economic growth
We really could still rejoin the EU. But Tory Britain isn’t up to it
The Conservatives could be out of office for two terms. Labour has the chance to govern with seriousness and restore trustIn his classic work The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody (1951), the New York Herald Tribune humorist Will Cuppy's verdict on Attila the Hun was: Attila's career teaches that you may get by for a while, but it can't last."Without wishing to push the comparison too far, I think Cuppy's observation epitomises the situation our present prime minister - they come and go, these Conservative prime ministers - now finds himself in. Continue reading...
UK mortgage approvals hit six-month low; pandemic recovery faster than expected – as it happened
Updated GDP figures show UK recovering faster from pandemic than Germany or France, but mortgage approvals have fallen
UK economy makes stronger recovery from pandemic than first thought
Revisions to figures show stronger performance than Germany and France but momentum starts to stall
UK households face tax rise of £3,500 a year by next election, finds IFS
Thinktank says Tories have overseen the biggest increase in taxes during a parliament since records began in 1951UK households are facing an average tax rise of 3,500 a year by the next election, the country's leading economics thinktank has said - the biggest increase over a parliament on records dating back more than 70 years.The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said that on current forecasts the Conservatives were on track to raise 100bn more annually by 2024 than if taxes as a share of national income had stayed the same as in 2019. Continue reading...
Investigation launched into killings and evictions on World Bank tourism project
Tanzania government blamed for violence against villagers in national park, while thousands more people face losing their homesThe World Bank is investigating allegations of killings, rape and forced evictions made by villagers living near the site of a proposed tourism project it is funding in Tanzania.The bank has been accused of enabling" alleged violence by the Tanzanian government to make way for a $150m (123m) project ministers say will protect the environment and attract more tourists to Ruaha national park. Continue reading...
Childcare costs ‘soaring by £600-plus a month’ as firms insist on return to office
Survey finds parents under pressure, as second study finds some are leaving workforce because of costsParents of nursery and primary school-age children are facing more than 600 of extra childcare costs a month, a study has found, as employers demand staff spend more days in the office.More than half of parents said they had come under increasing pressure to increase time spent at their desks, in response to a survey by the flexible childcare provider Pebble. Continue reading...
Europe’s workers face bleak winter as firms ‘profiteer’, says union chief
Millions holding on with their fingertips' due to high interest rates, squeezed wages and Covid costs, says the European TUC boss, Esther LynchWorkers across Europe are holding on with their fingernails" and face a bleak winter ahead, as high interest rates exacerbate the cost of living crisis, the European TUC leader, Esther Lynch, has warned.With eurozone interest rates at record levels, 2023 will be remembered as a time of great economic injustice", Lynch told the Guardian. The European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) represents 45 million workers from across the continent, including the UK. Continue reading...
UK economy ‘will shrink for two years as eurozone and US grow’
Thinktank chief and former Bank MPC member gloomy about stubborn inflation and labour shortagesThe UK economy will shrink this year and in 2024, according to a report by a leading US thinktank that said stubborn inflation and a shortage of workers would damage the prospects for growth more than most analysts expect.The Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) said a drop in GDP this year of 0.3% would be followed by a fall of 0.2% next year while the eurozone and the US were on course for growth this year and next. Continue reading...
UK’s cost of living crisis will cause thousands of premature deaths, study says
Study in the journal BMJ Public Health suggests premature deaths will rise 6.5% this yearThe cost of living crisis will probably cause thousands of premature deaths in the UK and significantly widen the wealth and health gap between the richest and poorest, a study has suggested.Millions of Britons have been hit hard with levels of inflation not seen since the 1970s as a result of the war in Ukraine, Covid, Brexit and economic policy. Poorer households have borne the brunt as they spend a larger proportion of their income on energy, the cost of which has soared. Continue reading...
Why has HS2 ended up being so expensive?
The project is shrouded in uncertainty and other countries' railway constructions appear to be cheaper
UK economy hit by ‘renewed signs of stress’ as growth slows; pound at six-month low – as it happened
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Over 50s in the UK: tell us why you are working part-time
We're keen to hear from UK workers aged 50 and over what their reasons are for working part-time, and how this is affecting their livesRecord numbers of people in their 50s and older are in part-time work, according to new data from the Office for National Statistics, with one quarter of workers in their 50s working part-time.The data reveals that 3.6 million older people are working part-time in the UK, a 12% increase since 2021. 42% of the UK's part-time workers are now aged over 50. Continue reading...
Great British slowdown has hamstrung our economy – thinktank
Country needs successful firms to grow and struggling ones to shrink, says Resolution FoundationThe UK needs more businesses to fail, or at least shrink, to solve the economy's long-running productivity crisis, a study has argued.The country's lack of economic dynamism", whereby weaker firms or lower productivity sectors shrink, and more productive ones grow, has caused GDP to be 4% lower between 2008 and 2019 than it would otherwise have been, according to a paper published on Monday by the Resolution Foundation. Continue reading...
UK’s political short-termism is killing hopes of business investment | Richard Partington
Without economic stability the country is likely to be left without solid foundations for recoveryLehman Brothers was still in business, Gordon Brown was the prime minister and George Bush was US president. The last time the Bank of England held interest rates above 5%, the world economy was very different. There were warning signs, but few could have predicted the severity of what happened next.Fifteen years later, the Bank again used its September meeting to keep interest rates on hold, bringing to a halt its most aggressive round of rate increases in decades, with rates set at 5.25%, the highest level since 2008. For many, the end of ever-higher rates could not have come soon enough. Continue reading...
Struggling self-employed in UK would prefer salaried job security, report claims
Mental health issues and lack of faith in government support are driving desire to change statusMental distress and financial insecurity has pushed 40% of self-employed workers to say they would switch to a salaried job if they could secure the same income, according to an academic study that has tracked self-employment trends during the Covid-19 pandemic.About one in eight would accept a 20% pay cut to get out of self-employment, such is the damage done to their mental health and the expectation that government support will not be forthcoming should another crisis wreck their business. Continue reading...
It’s a lie promoted by the right that state help saps people of their drive | Torsten Bell
There is no sign that furlough drove people away from the labour market, and research on Roosevelt's New Deal found that big government bound the country togetherLiz Truss is back in the news, but a small state is out of fashion - or at least with the punters. The new British social attitudes survey finds that seven in 10 of us think it's definitely government's job to control prices, up from three in 10 in 2006. Only 30% wanted public spending increased in 2009; now that's 55%.This has libertarians turning in their Tufton Street graves. But they should relax. Partly that's because the surge in support for big government shouldn't be a surprise and may be temporary. The survey was carried out in autumn 2022, when people faced unpayable energy bills without government support. And it followed a pandemic posing health and economic challenges individuals couldn't hope to address alone. Continue reading...
A year after Truss’s demolition job, the UK is still in a hole
Her worst ideas were reversed, but today's economy is similarly floundering as Sunak prepares for his own autumn budgetImagine an alternative world. Liz Truss has just completed her first year in office this weekend, having miraculously survived when her mini-budget triggered the worst political and economic meltdown since Black Wednesday.Andrew Bailey has been fired as Bank of England governor, the Office for Budget Responsibility has been abolished and the Treasury has been reformed: it's no longer a bastion of orthodoxy but a ward of No 10's pro-growth coalition. The International Monetary Fund has been ignored - despite the pound hitting a record low against the dollar - while high inflation and borrowing costs have fuelled a soaraway government deficit. Continue reading...
Zombie Britain sees zero growth – and that’s the good news
Some surveys predict recession, but with pay and confidence rising, they may be wrong. That's the best we, and the PM, can hope forAnother year of stagnation beckons. Well into 2024, we'll see the UK economy lurch from side to side, like a zombie, unable to move forward. While the government wrestled with the fallout from last year's Liz Truss mini-budget and the Bank of England killed off what enthusiasm was left by raising interest rates, it was inevitable a sense of stultifying gloom would dominate this year. But now it looks like next year will be much the same.Predictions from some independent economists and business groups even show that a recession in which the economy goes backwards for much of 2024 is more likely. Continue reading...
UK lenders expected to make further mortgage rate cuts next week
Mounting optimism that home-loan costs have peaked after Bank of England keeps interest rates on hold
UK recession risk grows as higher interest rates weigh on firms
Service sector and manufacturing output falls, with cost of living crisis also hitting businesses
Bank capital rules alone won’t stop failures – supervision is vital | Howard Davies
The US Fed is planning tough reforms, but earlier intervention could have prevented collapses at Silicon Valley Bank and othersBank capital is back in the financial headlines. In late July, US banking regulators, led by the Federal Reserve, announced plans to finalise the Basel 3 reforms (which banks like to call Basel 4, owing to their significant impact). The aim, according to a joint agency proposal, is to improve the strength and resilience of the banking system" by modifying large capital requirements to better reflect underlying risks, and by applying more transparent and consistent requirements.The announced proposals are tougher than many expected. They will cover more banks - including some that had benefited from Trump-era concessions - and they will require banks to include unrealised losses from securities in their capital ratios (among other changes). Overall, US regulators expect the most complex banks to increase their capital by 16%. Continue reading...
Republicans seize on auto workers strike as opportunity to recapture the White House
Republicans believe they stand to gain from the dispute but there is a divide between sympathy and disdain for the workersA strike pitting a resurgent trade union against the US's three biggest carmakers has exposed key differences in labour relations among Republicans - even while animating their assault on Joe Biden's self-styled Bidenomics" policies.Led by Donald Trump, the former president and 2024 party frontrunner, Republican hopefuls have seized on the stoppage by 13,000 United Auto Workers (UAW) members at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis production facilities in Missouri, Michigan and Ohio to highlight rumbling economic discontent as a catalyst to recapturing the White House. The UAW is demanding a 40% pay raise, shorter hours and better pensions for its members - and is threatening to spread the strike to other plants if its terms are not met. Continue reading...
Bank of England’s interest rate pause raises hopes peak has been reached
Relief for mortgage holders after 14 consecutive rises as UK economy comes under growing pressure
Bank of England governor says ‘no room for complacency’ after leaving interest rates on hold – as it happened
BoE policymakers were split 5-4 on interest rates this month, with a narrow majority voting to leave Bank rate at 5.25%
Judging by the state of the UK economy, the Bank is done with interest rate hikes
Decision to hold rate at 5.25% will be good news for mortgage holders and firms but reflects dramatic weakening of economic activity Business live - latest updates
Jeremy Hunt urged to spend on public services after inflation bolsters finances
Resolution Foundation says cuts earmarked for after election are even less tenable' now Treasury is 11.4bn better off than forecastHigh inflation boosted the government's finances in August, putting pressure on the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, to increase support for state services, a thinktank has said.Government borrowing was 11.6bn in August and almost 70bn in the first five months of the current financial year. This left the chancellor 11.4bn better off in the 2023-24 year so far than official forecasts predicted in March. Continue reading...
Bank of England interest rate decision on knife edge after inflation fall
Markets revise forecasts, raising chance interest rates may be kept on hold for first time in two yearsThe Bank of England is facing a knife-edge decision on interest rates after an unexpected fall in UK inflation last month, as financial markets bet the central bank could leave borrowing costs unchanged for the first time in almost two years.In a crunch week for the economy, the August figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Wednesday saw financial markets revise their forecasts, raising the chance of the central bank keeping interest rates on hold on Thursday from 20% to more than 50%. Continue reading...
US interest rate will remain unchanged at 22-year high, Federal Reserve says
Federal funds rate will remain at the the same level as the central bank announced in July, when it last raised ratesThe Federal Reserve announced it was leaving its benchmark interest rate unchanged at a 22-year high on Wednesday but signaled it could hike rates again in its fight to bring down inflation.After a two-day meeting the Fed announced its federal funds rate would remain in a range of 5.25 to 5.5% - the same level that the central bank announced in July, when it last raised rates. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak’s government risks looking incapable of honouring a commitment | Nils Pratley
Net zero rollback could be a disaster for business confidence, with cars policy looking particularly perverseOne can understand why Rishi Sunak sees political opportunity in watering down a few climate policies. Previous soundbites about the economic opportunity of the 21st century" may be correct in the round, but voters have also noticed that heat pumps are expensive and that the path to net zero by 2050 involves costs as well as opportunities. A strategy that claims, in effect, that net zero can be delivered more gently is not absurd for a party that is miles behind in the polls.The problem, though, is the one highlighted by the furious reaction from some carmakers, in particular, to Sunak's flip-flop. Any realistic route to net zero involves winning, and keeping, the broad confidence of businesses that will be overhauling the infrastructure. At one level, hitting the 2050 target requires an enormous public-private effort to rewire the entire economy. The whole point of setting interim targets is to make it more likely that you hit the main end goal. Presented with a legally binding commitment, the government risks looks incapable of delivering a plan that it can stick to. Continue reading...
Investors cut bets on UK interest rate rise after surprise fall in inflation – as it happened
Odds of an increase in UK interest rates on Thursday fall below 50%, after inflation rate dropped unexpectedly in August to an 18-month low
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