By Andy Bruce and David Milliken
(Reuters) -British business activity growth slowed to a crawl in December and employers cut staffing at the fastest rate in almost four years as a slump in corporate morale after the government’s budget rumbled on, a survey showed on Monday.
The final headline UK S&P Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) inched down to 50.4 from 50.5 in November, its lowest since October 2023. A preliminary reading for December had also been 50.5.
The survey is barely above the 50 dividing line between growth and contraction and adds to a run of lacklustre economic indicators since finance minister Rachel Reeves announced the biggest tax rises since 1993 in October.
The British Chambers of Commerce reported on Sunday that confidence fell to its lowest since just after former Prime Minister Liz Truss’ “mini-budget” in 2022 while concern about tax rises was the highest since at least 2017.
Britain’s economy stagnated in the three months to September and the Bank of England has estimated that it will flatline again in the fourth.
While the BoE thinks higher public spending will temporarily boost growth this year, a big question for its policymakers as they consider how quickly to cut interest rates is whether Reeves’ tax rises lead mostly to lower employment, higher prices or reduced profits and investment.
Investors are pricing in just two quarter-point rate cuts by the BoE in 2025 as inflation pressures remain sticky.
“A post-Budget slump in business optimism persisted in December, with output growth expectations for the year ahead unchanged from November’s 23-month low,” said Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Elliott Jordan-Doak, senior economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said PMI data over the fourth quarter was consistent with economic growth of 0.1%-0.3%, slightly stronger than the BoE’s forecast but still a weak level of momentum for the economy as it starts 2025.
“The drop in the PMI now looks more driven by a genuine deterioration in growth rather than the usual over-reaction to uncertainty,” he said.
BUSINESSES CUT HEADCOUNT
The PMI showed businesses shed jobs at the fastest rate since January 2021, during a COVID-19 lockdown.
Companies that had cut staffing in December overwhelmingly cited rising costs, in particular due to Reeves’ increase in employer social insurance contributions from April.
The PMI’s gauge of future output fell to its lowest level since December 2022 while costs faced by businesses increased at the fastest pace since April.
“Nearly one-in-four survey respondents saw an overall decline in their payroll numbers. Excluding the pandemic, this represented the steepest pace of job shedding for more than 15 years,” Moore said.
The BCC survey of nearly 5,000 businesses showed that 55% of firms planned to raise prices, up from 39% the quarter before, while 24% intended to cut investment, up from 18% previously.
A separate survey by the Federation of Small Businesses showed that 67% of respondents planned to recruit fewer staff and 32% intended to reduce headcount.
(Reporting by Andy Bruce and David Milliken. Editing by Hugh Lawson and Mark Potter)