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Economic Development

Expansion in new Welsh orders but capacity pressures are weighing on output growth

Rate of job creation has accelerates to series record.

Cardiff Bay(Image: Matthew Dixon/Getty Images)

There has been a marked expansion in new Welsh orders, according to research by NatWest, but capacity pressures are weighing on output growth.

The headline NatWest Wales Business Activity Index – a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region’s manufacturing and service sectors – also found that the rate of job creation has accelerates to series record.

The latest index in the country registered 58.0 in August, down from 61.4 in July, to signal a marked expansion in business activity across the Welsh private sector, albeit the slowest for five months.

Companies stated that the rise in output was due to strong client demand and a sustained upturn in new orders. Welsh firms registered the second-sharpest expansion in activity of the 12 monitored º£½ÇÊÓÆµ areas.

Welsh firms signalled a marked rise in new orders during August, albeit at the slowest pace since April. Nevertheless, the rate of growth was by far the fastest of the 12 monitored º£½ÇÊÓÆµ areas. Companies continued to note that strong client demand supported new order inflows. At the sub-sector level, the upturn was driven by one of the fastest service sector expansions on record, whereas manufacturers noted a slightly softer rise in new sales.

August data signalled stronger expectations regarding the outlook for output over the coming year among Welsh private sector firms. Anecdotal evidence suggested that greater confidence stemmed from new product developments and hopes of an end to the COVID-19 pandemic. Optimism in Wales was slightly stronger than that seen across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ as a whole.

Welsh private sector firms registered a fourth successive monthly upturn in workforce numbers during August. Companies linked greater staffing numbers to increased business requirements and a rise in new order inflows. Although strengthening to a series record (since January 2001), the rate of job creation was slightly slower than the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average.