National income
National income latest
2nd quarter, 2019
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have fallen by 0.2% in volume terms in the first quarter of 2019 (April to June, 2019) according to figures released by the ONS. This follows an increase in the 1st quarter by 0.5%. Over the year GDP grew by 1.2%
The service sector was the only sector to show positive growth, slowing to 0.1%. In contrast, the production sector contracted by 1.4%.
UK growth rate and level
*’Chained volume’ measures adjust the value of GDP (or other economic indicators) on an annual basis by stripping out the affects of inflation to generate ‘real’ measures, where current measures are adjusted by the inflation rate of the previous year. This method, which uses chain linking, avoids the need to periodically adjust figures using a ‘base year’ method, and ‘smoothes out’ the data over time.
Previous Data
1st quarter, 2019
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.5% in volume terms in the first quarter of 2019 (January to March, 2019) according to figures released by the ONS. This marks an increase from the last quarter of 2018, when quarterly growth stood at just 0.2%
While service sector growth slowed, there was an increase in growth in the production sector, driven largely by growth of 2.2% in the manufacturing sector. Private consumption, government consumption and investment all contributed to growth, while the UK’s trade deficit grew to (-) 3.4% of nominal GDP.
3rd quarter, 2018
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.6% in volume terms in the third quarter of 2018 (July to September, 2018) according to figures released by the ONS.
The largest contribution to growth came from service industries, which grew at 0.3%. While household spending grew by 0.5%, investment spending by business fell by 1.2%.
UK exports grew by 2.7%, and imports remained largely unchanged.
1st quarter, 2018
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.1% in the first quarter of 2018 (January to March, 2018) according to figures released by the ONS. This is the slowest rate of growth since the last quarter of 2012.
The main drag on growth came from falling output in the construction sector (down by 3.3%). Growth in manufacturing and production (0.2% and 0.7% respectively), and in services (up 0.3%) offset falls in construction, although the ONS notes that long term growth in this sector is likely to weaken.
4th quarter, 2017
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.5% in the fourth quarter of 2017 (October to December, 2017) according to figures released by the ONS. Growth over the year, compared with quarter 3, 2016, is estimated at 1.8%.
Fourth quarter growth was, as previously, driven largely by the service sector, which grew by 0.6%, and by solid growth in the manufacturing sector.
Construction fell again (for the third quarter in a row). was down for the second consecutive quarter and GDP per head increased by 0.4%. over the quarter, and by 0.9% on the year.
3rd quarter, 2017
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.4% in the third quarter of 2017 (July to September, 2017) according to figures released by the ONS. Growth over the year, compared with quarter 3, 2016, is estimated at 1.5%.
Third quarter growth was, as previously, driven largely by the service sector, which grew by 0.4%, with computer programming, motor and retail trades providing the greatest growth. Construction was down for the second consecutive quarter and GDP per head increased by 0.3%.
2nd quarter, 2017
UK gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have increased by 0.3% in the second quarter of 2017 (April to June, 2017) according to figures released by the ONS. Growth over the year – to June 2017 – is estimated at 1.7%.
Second quarter growth was driven largely by the service sector, which grew by 0.5% compared with 0.1% in the previous quarter. While retail sales were up, construction and manufacturing provided the largest downward pressure on GDP.
1st quarter, 2017
UK GDP was estimated to have increased by just 0.3% in the first quarter of 2017. This was the lowest rate of growth for a year. The ONS‘s analysis indicates that the main culprit was lower growth in the service sector, including retail sales and accommodation, with price rises curbing consumer spending. The other three sectors, production, construction and agriculture grew by 0.3%, 0.2% and 0.3% respectively.
4th quarter, 2016
UK GDP was estimated to have increased by 0.6% between Quarter 3 (July to September) and Quarter 4 (October to December), according to preliminary ONS estimates published on December 26th , 2017 (later revised up to 0.7%). This is now the 16th consecutive quarter of positive growth since Quarter 1, 2013. Growth in the consumer-focussed service sector made the most significant contribution to overall growth, along with strong performance in UK manufactures.
The figures provide clear evidence that the UK economy is proving resilient to any post-Brexit shock, although all economic forecasters are predicting a rise in the rate of inflation over the medium term. In its latest inflation report the UK Treasury forecast inflation rising to 2.75% by 2018.
3rd quarter, 2016
UK GDP was estimated to have increased by 0.5% between Quarter 2 (April to June, 2016) and Quarter 3 (July to September), according to preliminary estimates published on October 27th, 2016 (later revised up to 0.6%). This is now the 15th consecutive quarter of positive growth since Quarter 1 2013. Growth in the service sector (up 0.8%) has more than compensated for falls in all the other key sectors of the economy.
The figure suggests that, while growth has slowed (down from 0.7% in the previous quarter), any negative impact of Brexit has yet to be felt across the whole economy. The data released today is the first full quarter statistic since the June referendum. A growing service sector more than made up for declines in manufacturing, construction and agriculture. Reasonably buoyant retail sales combined with the effects of looser monetary policy appear to have stabilised the UK economy in the short term.
2nd quarter, 2016
GDP is estimated to have grown by 0.7% (revised up from 0.6% – 30/09/2016) in the second quarter of 2016, according to figures released by the ONS. This compares with growth of 0.4% in the first quarter (January to March).
Falls in the construction and agricultural sectors were more than compensated for by increases in the services and production sectors, with production increasing by 2.1% and services by 0.6%.
This means that, over the year, UK growth was very close to its long term trend rate, of 2.2%. Of course, any impact of Brexit on GDP will not be known for a few months – data for October is likely to provide a clear signal of any post-Brexit effect on the real economy.
4th quarter, 2015
The UK economy grew by 0.5% in the last quarter of 2015, according to preliminary estimates released this week using the output approach method of measurement. This compares with growth of 0.4% in the third quarter (July to Sept ember 2015).
Sectors experiencing the strongest growth were services (at 0.7%) and agriculture (at 0.6%). In contrast, industrial production and construction declined by 0.2% and 0.1% respectively. Comparing the last quarter of 2014 with the last quarter of 2015, GDP grew overall by 1.9%, and over the year GDP was up 2.2% – roughly the UK’s trend rate of growth. This means that the UK economy is now producing around 6.6% more than at the pre-recession peak of the first quarter of 2008.
2nd quarter estimates, 2015
UK GDP grew by 0.7% in the second quarter of 2015 (April to June) – up from 0.4% in the previous quarter, according to official estimates from the ONS. Over the previous year, GDP grew by 2.6%. Growth came largely from an increase in consumer spending on services. Output from agriculture and construction remained flat, but there was a small increase in industrial output. This is positive news for the UK Chancellor, George Osborne, although the much sought-after rebalancing, from consumption to investment and exports, remains elusive. The strength of Sterling couple with a weak global economy are largely responsible for the lack of export growth.
Output increased by 0.8% in services and 1.3% in agriculture, but decreased by 1.8% in construction and 0.1% in production. GDP was 2.7% higher on the year.