The horror! Yesterday we discovered that UK economic output — as measured by GDP — fell by 1.6 per cent in the first quarter of the year, 0.1 per cent worse than the 1.5 per cent originally reported. This is practically a rounding error. To put it in context, as recently as March the Office for Budget Responsibility, which crunches the numbers for the Chancellor, was forecasting that GDP would fall by 3.8 per cent in Q1.
As well as still beating these gloomy expectations, the latest figures are also old news. But if anything, the detail is encouraging. The downward revision to headline GDP was largely due to a bigger decline in consumer spending than first thought, mirrored by an upward revision to household saving. This means that the boost from pent-up demand in the second quarter (and beyond) may prove to be even stronger.
Roll forward a few months and there is already plenty of evidence that the economy is roaring back.
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