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United Kingdom GDP growth is projected to pick up from 0.5% in 2023 to 0.7% in 2024 and 1.2% in 2025. Private expenditure will replace government consumption and investment as the main driver of growth, helped by easing price pressures. Headline inflation will subside from historically high levels but remain above target over most of the projection period. Core inflation will linger at 3.8% in 2024 and 2.6% in 2025 on the back of the tight, albeit easing, labour market. Unemployment will edge up to 4.9% in 2025. The fiscal stance is becoming restrictive and adequately supports monetary policy, which is expected to remain tight until price pressures ease sustainably. Continuing to address fiscal challenges is a priority, including by swiftly implementing planned supply-side reforms to boost potential growth. Better land-use planning regulations are necessary for the timely rollout of decarbonisation investments. Monetary tightening is working its way through the economy GDP is estimated to have stagnated in the third quarter, after growing by 0.2% in the second quarter. Retail sales volumes are falling and were 2.7% lower in October than in the same month a year earlier. Consumer confidence remains depressed, although it is markedly higher than a year ago. New mortgage lending has continued to decline, with fewer than 45 000 new approvals for house purchase in September, down from almost 100 000 in January 2021 when the monetary tightening cycle started. After a short-lived pick up, business sentiment in services has deteriorated again. Lending to businesses contracted by 1.5% over the year to September.
United Kingdom 1
1. Average quote for 5-year fixed rate (75% LTV). 2. Sterling weighted average rate on loans and new advances to private non-financial corporations. Source: Bank of England; and Office of National Statistics. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/9bv6fa
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2023 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2023