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London (Reuters): Britain’s Brexit-bound economy remains stuck in a low gear but is probably not weak enough to dissuade the Bank of England from raising interest rates next month, economic data showed.
Separately on Tuesday, Britain’s budget forecasters gave a gloomier medium-term outlook for the economy, potentially leaving finance minister Philip Hammond with less room to offset any big hit from Britain’s departure from the European Union.
The somewhat downbeat picture for the world’s fifth-biggest economy from a raft of data - including a record goods trade deficit - contrasted with the situation in some of Britain’s closest trading partners in the European Union.
German exports outpaced imports in August, adding to signs it performed strongly in the third quarter, and Italian industrial output was much stronger than expected. But there were some signs of encouragement for Britain.
The country’s factories had their strongest two months of 2017 in July and August, and the construction sector grew for the first time in three months.
In year-on-year terms, factory output was 2.8% higher, its fastest growth in six months.
Revisions to past data showed Britain’s economy had been a bit less weak earlier this year than previously thought.
“They’re not storming figures but I think they’re good enough to keep the Bank of England on track for a November rate hike,” said Victoria Clarke, an economist with Investec.
Britain’s economy has slowed sharply this year as consumers felt the pinch from rising inflation, caused largely by the fall in the value of the pound after the Brexit vote, and by weak wage growth. Nonetheless, the BoE said last month that most of its policymakers thought it was likely that they would need to raise rates for the first time in a decade in the coming months.
The BoE believes last year’s Brexit vote will create more inflation pressure by dampening business investment and slowing migration to Britain.
Figures for the much bigger services sector are due to be released on Oct. 25, along with a preliminary first estimate for third-quarter gross domestic product growth, little more than a week before the BoE’s Nov. 2 announcement.
Many economists say only a shock weakening in those figures is likely to cause the BoE to delay raising rates.
In a reminder of the long-standing problems that have held back Britain’s economy, Tuesday’s data showed the country’s deficit in its trade in goods hit an all-time high in cash terms.
That was despite the slump in the value of the pound which some supporters of Brexit have predicted will deliver an export boom. Export volumes in the three months to August were 3.2% lower than the previous three months, though they are 8.9% higher than a year before.
Finance minister Hammond is due to present an annual budget on Nov. 22. Although he is under pressure to increase public spending and eliminate a pay cap on public sector pay, any cut in productivity forecasts would substantially limit his room for manoeuvre by reducing future tax revenues.