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“The UK will have the highest inflation and slowest growth next year of any G7 economy”- IMF

by danielbarker on 16 October, 2023

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Taken from a BBC News article by Lucy Hooker & Faisal Islam & Daniel Thomas

The International Monetary Fund has rejected government suggestions that its latest assessment of the UK economy is too gloomy.

The influential global group forecasts the UK will have the highest inflation and slowest growth next year of any G7 economy, falling behind the US, France, Germany, Canada, Italy and Japan.

The Treasury said recent revisions to UK growth had not been factored in to the IMF’s report, but the group denied being pessimistic.

IMF chief economist Pierre Olivier Gourinchas told the BBC: “We’re above the Bank of England estimate [for growth] for next year, so I don’t think we are particularly pessimistic. I think we’re trying to be honest interpreters of the data here.”

Forecasts are never perfect given the many factors that affect economic growth – from geopolitics to the weather. But such reports can point in the right direction, especially where they align with other predictions.

The IMF, an international organisation with 190 member countries, has said the forecasts it makes for growth the following year in most advanced economies have, more often than not, been within about 1.5 percentage points of what actually happens.

According to the group’s latest forecast, which it produces every six months, it expects the UK to grow more quickly than Germany in 2023, keeping the UK out of bottom place for growth among the G7.

But it downgraded the UK’s prospects for next year, estimating the economy will grow by 0.6%, making it the slowest growing developed country in 2024 – widely predicted to be a general election year.

The IMF says the UK’s immediate prospects are being weighed down by the need to keep interest rates high to control inflation, which has been falling but remains stubbornly above target.

It warned Bank of England rates would peak at 6% and stay around 5% until 2028. Rates are currently 5.25%.

“The decline in [UK] growth reflects tighter monetary policies to curb still-high inflation and lingering impacts of the terms-of-trade shock from high energy prices,” the report said.

The IMF’s forecast has come at a bad time for the UK government, which is keen to promote the idea that the economy is at a turning point with inflation falling decisively and interest rates likely to have peaked.

Government sources suggested the IMF had not taken into account the fact that expectations for market interest rates had fallen in recent weeks, and that the Office for National Statistics (ONS) had upgraded its assessment of the UK’s post-pandemic recovery.

However, Mr Gourinchas rejected that, telling the BBC that the IMF had “absolutely” factored in interest rates peaking late last month and that “there is no discrepancy”.

He added that a “preliminary read” of the ONS’s revised data had changed the picture for 2021, but “probably not much” for the current forecasts.

“If anything,” he said, past upgrades for 2021 would mean “there is less room to grow and catch up, so it might not lead to a big change upwards in terms of the growth performance.”

IMF rates prediction

On Tuesday, the Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC), which monitors the stability of the UK financial system, also warned on the UK’s high interest rates.

It said financial markets expected rates would “have to stay high for a long time”, putting pressure on household finances.

“The full impact of higher interest rates has not yet passed through to all borrowers,” it added.

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