UK economy to SUFFER BIGGEST HIT from energy crisis among G7 nations

UK economy to SUFFER BIGGEST HIT from energy crisis among G7 nations
Jacob King
Carl Bennett

By Carl Bennett


Published: 22/11/2022

- 12:38

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 10:30

Forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development reveal a sharp downgrade for the UK economy

The UK economy will contract more than any of the world’s seven most advanced nations next year as Britain suffers from painful inflation exacerbated by worker shortages and “untargeted” energy support, according to a report.

The latest forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) reveal a sharp downgrade for the UK economy, which is expected to shrink by 0.4% in 2023 and grow by just 0.2% in 2024.


It had predicted in September that UK growth would flatline in 2023.

The UK economy will contract more than any of the world\u2019s seven most advanced nations next year, according to a report.
The UK economy will contract more than any of the world’s seven most advanced nations next year, according to a report.
Dominic Lipinski

Germany is the only other G7 country set to see a contraction in gross domestic product (GDP) next year, with a 0.3% drop, according to the report.

Italy will see only paltry growth of 0.2%, while the United States will eke out 0.5% expansion, with GDP set to rise by 0.6% in France and 1% in Canada and 1.8% in Japan.

The UK is also the third worst performing nation of all the G20 advanced countries worldwide, with only Russia and Sweden seeing a bigger decline in GDP, at 5.6% and 0.6%.

When compared with the average of all the world economies, the UK’s performance is set to trail behind the 2.2% in global growth predicted for next year, but this is still a sharp slowdown on the 3.1% expected in 2022 due to the energy crisis and trading sanctions sparked by Russia’s war on Ukraine.

The OECD also took aim at the UK Government’s support efforts to cap energy bills at around £2,500 until April, saying it will push up inflation and mean households and businesses will be hit by higher interest rates as a result as policymakers look to rein in price and wage rises.

It said: “The untargeted Energy Price Guarantee announced in September 2022 by the Government will increase pressure on already high inflation in the short term, requiring monetary policy to tighten more and raising debt service costs.

“Better targeting of measures to cushion the impact of high energy prices would lower the budgetary cost, better-preserve incentives to save energy, and reduce the pressure on demand at a time of high inflation.”

When asked for Rishi Sunak\u2019s response to the OECD, the Prime Minister\u2019s official spokesman said: \u201cThese are challenges that are affecting different countries at slightly different times.\u201d
When asked for Rishi Sunak’s response to the OECD, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “These are challenges that are affecting different countries at slightly different times.”
Jacob King

The gloomy picture for the UK comes after the official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), last week warned Britain’s economy will shrink by 2% in total over a lengthy recession that started in the third quarter.

It downgraded previous projections that the economy would actually grow by 1.8% in 2023 to a fall of 1.4% for the year.

When asked for Rishi Sunak’s response to the OECD, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “These are challenges that are affecting different countries at slightly different times.”

On the criticism over the energy support package, he added: “We’re taking a different approach post-April to the energy support, targeting it towards the most vulnerable.”

The OECD said UK inflation – which hit a 41-year high of 11.1% in October – will likely peak at the end of this year and remain above 9% into early 2023, before slowing to 4.5% by next year-end and to 2.7% by the end of 2024.

Its report sees UK interest rates rising further from 3% currently to 4.5% by April next year, while unemployment will lift from 3.6% to 5% by the end of 2024.

On Britain’s outlook, the OECD cautioned: “Risks to the outlook are considerable and tilted towards the downside.

“Higher-than-expected goods and energy prices could weigh on consumption and further depress growth.

“A prolonged period of acute labour shortages could force firms into a more permanent reduction in their operating capacity or push up wage inflation further.”

But it said households may choose to return to the jobs market to help boost stretched finances.

“While households may seek to boost their real income by striking for stronger wage increases, they may also increase their labour supply either by returning from inactivity or by increasing working hours, which would be an upside risk,” said the OECD.

While the UK is facing a prolonged recession, the OECD believes the world economy will avoid the same fate.

OECD interim chief economist Alvaro Santos Pereira said: “We are currently facing a very difficult economic outlook.

“Our central scenario is not a global recession, but a significant growth slowdown for the world economy in 2023, as well as still high, albeit declining, inflation in many countries.”

It warned that “risks remain significant”.

“In these difficult and uncertain times, policy has once again a crucial role to play, further tightening of monetary policy is essential to fight inflation, and fiscal policy support should become more targeted and temporary.”

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