UK economy to avoid recession, says Hunt

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Politics

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The UK economy is set to shrink this year but avoid a technical recession, according to the government’s independent forecaster.

The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) now expects the size of the economy to fall by 0.2% in 2023.

But it will escape the usual definition of a recession, which is two consecutive three-month periods of decline, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said.

It came as he set out the government’s growth plans in the Budget.

The OBR also said inflation would more than halve to 2.9% by the end of 2023.

Inflation – the rate at which prices are rising – is currently in double digits, driven by soaring food and energy prices.

In a growing economy, the value of the goods and services that the country produces – measured by gross domestic product (GDP) – increases each quarter.

It is a sign that people are doing more work and, on average, getting a little bit richer.

But sometimes the level of GDP falls, and that is a sign that the economy is doing badly.

The OBR said the economy was still likely to shrink this year, but by less than it previously thought.

It now expects GDP to fall by 0.2% in 2023, having predicted a 1.4% drop six months ago.

“After this year the UK economy will grow in every single year of the forecast period: by 1.8% in 2024; 2.5% in 2025; 2.1% in 2026; and 1.9% in 2027,” Mr Hunt said.

Chart showing growth forecasts

Mr Hunt said the economy was “proving the doubters wrong”, despite growth remaining lacklustre this year.

The growth forecasts for 2025, 2026 and 2027 are also downgrades compared with what the OBR was expecting six months ago.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the Budget was “dressing up stagnation as stability”, adding that it put the country “on a path of managed decline”.

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How can we avoid a recession and still shrink?

Analysis box by Robert Cuffe, Head of statistics

The chancellor has announced that the economy will avoid a “technical recession” this year, but that doesn’t mean we’re out of the woods.

The size of the economy – the value of everything we make and produce this year – is set to fall by about 0.2% according to the chancellor’s figures.

It becomes a “technical recession” if the economy shrinks for two seasons (three-month periods) in a row. So it’s possible to avoid the technical definition even if the economy is doing badly if it shrinks in the spring and autumn but rises in the summer.

A forecast of a 0.2% shrinkage may be better than we thought last autumn (shrinking by 1.4%) but it’s hardly anyone’s definition of doing well.

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The chancellor also said the UK was on track to meet the government’s self-imposed fiscal rules.

“We are meeting our fiscal rule to have debt falling as a percentage of GDP by the fifth year of the forecast,” Mr Hunt said.

“At the Autumn Statement I also announced that public sector net borrowing must be below 3% of GDP over the same period,” he continued.

“The OBR confirm today that we are meeting that rule with a buffer of £39.2bn. In fact our deficit falls in every single year of the forecast.”

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