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.
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