British factories predicting an upturn

Posted on 21 Feb 2025 by The Manufacturer

Figures from the Confederation of British Industry has shown that British factories are predicting an upturn in output over the next three months despite a weak backdrop due to higher taxes and energy costs and a difficult export environment.

Rueters reported that the CBI’s monthly balance for manufacturers’ output expectations over the next three months rose sharply to +8 in February from -19 in January, a three-month high that took it back to its long-run average.

“With firms having rapidly run down stocks of finished goods, it’s possible that the need to re-build inventories partly explains this rebound. Order books remain weak from a long-term perspective,” CBI lead economist Ben Jones said.

The CBI’s headline industrial orders index rose to -28 from -34 – slightly above economists’ forecasts of -30 but below its long-run average of -13. The export order balance increased only marginally to -36 from -38.

“The survey paints a downbeat picture of the manufacturing sector over the last three months, which can be attributed in part to low domestic business confidence following the Autumn Budget combined with a subdued international environment,” Jones said.

Finance minister Rachel Reeves’ first Budget on October 30 included a £25bn rise in employment taxes and the government announced a nearly seven per cent rise in the minimum wage at the same time.

Official data last week showed that British industrial output fell by 1.7% last year, including a 0.8% fall in the final three months of the year, the fifth consecutive monthly decline.

For more articles like this, visit our Leadership channel.