UK economy contracts as Iran war impact felt

Responding to the figures, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves said that the war “will have an impact at home”.
“Before the conflict in the Middle East, growth was higher than expected and inflation was falling,” she said.
“The choices I have made as Chancellor mean our economy is in a stronger position to deal with the costs of the war.”
Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said, external “putting Benefits Street first leaves the economy weaker”, adding that only the Conservatives “have a plan to get Britain working again”.
Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Daisy Cooper said the GDP figures showed the government was “asleep at the wheel”, adding Labour had left the economy “vulnerable… in the face of Trumpflation and geopolitical turmoil”.
Reform’s Treasury spokesperson Robert Jenrick said: “The economy is shrinking because of the choices Rachel Reeves is making.”
The ONS said that the main driver of the contraction in April was a 0.2% fall in the dominant services sector – which accounts for about three-quarters of the UK’s economy
Areas of the services sector that were particularly hard hit included arts and entertainment, sports activities and amusement and recreation activities.
The ONS said that “some of this fall can be attributed to the effects from the conflict in the Middle East, with the cancellation of multiple sporting events in the Middle East affecting the output of UK-based businesses”.
It also added that some manufacturing, transport and travel business had also seen their trading affected by the impact of the Iran war.
Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said the Bank of England could raise interest rates later in the year, but “the weakness in economic activity will probably mean rates stay on hold this year”.
The Bank is widely expected to keep rates unchanged when it meets next week. Before the Iran war broke out, analysts had widely expected it to cut rates this year.
Gregory said the contraction in April “showed the strong start to the year is now faltering”.
“We expect the economy to come to a standstill this quarter and next as the hit to households’ real incomes from higher energy prices intensifies.”




