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UK slides back into recession in first double dip since 1970s

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UK slides back into recession in first double dip since 1970s

LONDON: Britain's economy slid into its second recession since the financial crisis after official data unexpectedly showed a fall in output in the first three months of 2012, piling pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron's embattled coalition government.

The Office for National Statistics said Britain's gross domestic product fell 0.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2012 after contracting by 0.3 per cent at the end of 2011, confoundi ng forecasts for 0.1 per cent growth.

Most economists had expected Britain's $2.4 trillion economy to eke out modest growth in the early 2012, but these forecasts were upset by the biggest fall in construction output in t hree years coupled with anaemic service sector growth and a fall in industrial output.

Wednesday's figures will be a deep blow for Britain's Conservative / Liberal Democrat coalition, which has slid in opinion polls since a poorly received annual budget statement in March and risks embarrassment at local elections on May 3. The government is also under pressure over revelations about its close relationship with media tycoon Rupert Murdoch.

The government desperately needs growth to achieve its overriding goal of eliminating Britain's large budget deficit over the next five years. Britain's economy contracted by 7.1 per cent during its 2008-2009 recession and recovery since has been slow, with headwinds from the euro zone debt crisis, government spending cu ts, high inflation and a damaged banking sector.

Wednesday's data showed that output was still 4.3 per cent below its peak in the first quarter of 2008, and the economy has only grown by 0.4 per cent since the government came t o power in the second quarter of 2010.

Output in Britain's service sector - which makes up more than three quarters of GDP - rose by just 0.1 per cent in the first quarter after falling 0.1 per cent in Q4 2011, ke pt down by a fall in output in the large business services and finance sector.

Industrial output was 0.4 per cent lower, while construction - which accounts for less than 8 per cent of GDP - contracted by 3.0 per cent, the biggest fall since Q1 2009. Britain's Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts growth of 0.8 per cent this year.

Wednesday's data shows that first quarter output was no higher than a year earlier. The Bank of England has warned that there is a risk of another contraction in the second quarter of 2012, due to an extra public holiday. But unlike during the previous tw o quarters, it does not appear keen to provide further monetary stimulus through quantitative easing asset purchases, due to above-target inflation which looks stickier than before.

The BoE, and a number of private-sector economists, had argued before Wednesday that the underlying health of Britain's economy was stronger than ONS data suggested, d ue to relatively upbeat private-sector surveys and a fall in unemployment.

The ONS's preliminary estimates of GDP are the first released in the European Union, and are based partly on estimated data. On average, they are revised by 0.1 percentage points up or down by the time a second revision is published two months later, but bigger moves are not uncommon.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...uble-dip-since-1970s/articleshow/12865268.cms
 
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UK slides back into recession in first double dip since 1970s

LONDON: Britain's economy slid into its second recession since the financial crisis after official data unexpectedly showed a fall in output in the first three months of 2012, piling pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron's embattled coalition government.

The Office for National Statistics said Britain's gross domestic product fell 0.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2012 after contracting by 0.3 per cent at the end of 2011, confoundi ng forecasts for 0.1 per cent growth.

Most economists had expected Britain's $2.4 trillion economy to eke out modest growth in the early 2012, but these forecasts were upset by the biggest fall in construction output in t hree years coupled with anaemic service sector growth and a fall in industrial output.

Wednesday's figures will be a deep blow for Britain's Conservative / Liberal Democrat coalition, which has slid in opinion polls since a poorly received annual budget statement in March and risks embarrassment at local elections on May 3. The government is also under pressure over revelations about its close relationship with media tycoon Rupert Murdoch.

The government desperately needs growth to achieve its overriding goal of eliminating Britain's large budget deficit over the next five years. Britain's economy contracted by 7.1 per cent during its 2008-2009 recession and recovery since has been slow, with headwinds from the euro zone debt crisis, government spending cu ts, high inflation and a damaged banking sector.

Wednesday's data showed that output was still 4.3 per cent below its peak in the first quarter of 2008, and the economy has only grown by 0.4 per cent since the government came t o power in the second quarter of 2010.

Output in Britain's service sector - which makes up more than three quarters of GDP - rose by just 0.1 per cent in the first quarter after falling 0.1 per cent in Q4 2011, ke pt down by a fall in output in the large business services and finance sector.

Industrial output was 0.4 per cent lower, while construction - which accounts for less than 8 per cent of GDP - contracted by 3.0 per cent, the biggest fall since Q1 2009. Britain's Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts growth of 0.8 per cent this year.

Wednesday's data shows that first quarter output was no higher than a year earlier. The Bank of England has warned that there is a risk of another contraction in the second quarter of 2012, due to an extra public holiday. But unlike during the previous tw o quarters, it does not appear keen to provide further monetary stimulus through quantitative easing asset purchases, due to above-target inflation which looks stickier than before.

The BoE, and a number of private-sector economists, had argued before Wednesday that the underlying health of Britain's economy was stronger than ONS data suggested, d ue to relatively upbeat private-sector surveys and a fall in unemployment.

The ONS's preliminary estimates of GDP are the first released in the European Union, and are based partly on estimated data. On average, they are revised by 0.1 percentage points up or down by the time a second revision is published two months later, but bigger moves are not uncommon.

UK slides back into recession in first double dip since 1970s - The Economic Times

Few things we may say by just our guts feeling. I have my managements degrees and have studied economics subjects as part of it and with my experience of reading economics related news for over 20 years, I may say that the chances are just 50% that UK will ever reach its economic size it had in mid 2008, at least not till 2050, the chances are 50%. (as per the current trend on the trade side like how Western companies are losing business to China/ and heavily indebted OECD economies and on the top of that they are borrowing more to avoid any sudden recession means they are in fact adding the problem.) I find, UK would struggle to maintain its current economic size by next 5-6 years and then within 5 to 10 years from now, in between 2017 to 2022, UK would then be dragged into a recession with many other OECD economies, similar to how Russia faced in 90s. and they would reach a level of economic fall by 2022/25, hopefully, that their per capita income would then fall below to that of China bringing all the industrial jobs back to US/ EU from Asia. lets see what what we will see in our time............. :meeting:
 
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so i guess its time to strip UK from its unsc seat and make India a permanent member,everybody salutes the rising sun.......
 
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so i guess its time to strip UK from its unsc seat and make India a permanent member,everybody salutes the rising sun.......

A bit silly, UK is developed economy , fully saturated, reccesion isn't much of a surpise
 
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^6
That's bad...i might have to go there for about 2 years due to my company needs...My wife is prepsring for her CFA level 3 and her exam is due on 3 June 2012...We were hoping that being a post grad in economics and all the three levels under her belt it would be easy to get a job....obviously it is silly to ask for jobs when economy is in recession but i will appreciate if anybody from UK can give a more clear picture about how the job market is going on there...
 
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^6
That's bad...i might have to go there for about 2 years due to my company needs...My wife is prepsring for her CFA level 3 and her exam is due on 3 June 2012...We were hoping that being a post grad in economics and all the three levels under her belt it would be easy to get a job....obviously it is silly to ask for jobs when economy is in recession but i will appreciate if anybody from UK can give a more clear picture about how the job market is going on there...

If you have the skills you can pay the bills.

I personally know 2 people who went to live in London in the past years. One is a scholed veterinarian the other is a barman. I havent heard much complaints over Facebook....

Also you can check employment agencies websites beforehand to get a broader picture of what's going on.
 
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^6
That's bad...i might have to go there for about 2 years due to my company needs...My wife is prepsring for her CFA level 3 and her exam is due on 3 June 2012...We were hoping that being a post grad in economics and all the three levels under her belt it would be easy to get a job....obviously it is silly to ask for jobs when economy is in recession but i will appreciate if anybody from UK can give a more clear picture about how the job market is going on there...

but remember one thing they will prefer caucasian people first over any other race and with unemployment all time high and economy growth all time low,its hard to get a job now a days,your wife might just have to stay at home and relax...
 
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but remember one thing they will prefer caucasian people first over any other race and with unemployment all time high and economy growth all time low,its hard to get a job now a days,your wife might just have to stay at home and relax...

lol, nothing says welcome better than that. :lol:
 
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I hope situation doesnt turn out to be as bad as the Greece mess .... Hope UK comes out of this soon since lot of Indian exports are at stake !!!
 
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so i guess its time to strip UK from its unsc seat and make India a permanent member,everybody salutes the rising sun.......

'Rising Sun' on S&P Rating Watch today. Outlook Negative. Junk status on the way for 'Rising Sun' (aka Death Star Blackhole).
 
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The economic trench is shifting eastward until it reach parity and soon geopolitics will follow.

Thats true ,but we need a huge consumer base of the west to sell our wares and for that its better countries like UK doesnt fall into recession !
 
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Oxford's gonna gouge the international students again.
 
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'Rising Sun' on S&P Rating Watch today. Outlook Negative. Junk status on the way for 'Rising Sun' (aka Death Star Blackhole).

correct. we have a thread on this: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/175637-s-ps-cuts-indias-rating-stable-negative.html

and a statement on the weak ruppees:

Today, the rupee is expected to remain under pressure from weaker domestic equities, and further on domestic concerns and FIIs pulling out funds. The month-end demand will also keep pressure on the rupee.

Rupee may trade in 52.60-53.05 range:Karvy Stock Broking - Moneycontrol.com -

Keep blasting your apu "China killers" and let the eurphoria continue in the land of eternal boasts!
 
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