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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Northern Ireland PMI: Inflationary pressures hit private sector business activity hard

"As far as the economy is concerned, storm clouds continue to gather"

An illustration of the main economic indicators in the PMI last month

Confirmation that inflationary pressures are leaving the Northern Ireland economy hamstrung have emerged in the latest PMI report from Ulster Bank, which reported the sharpest slowdown in activity in a decade.

It said that apart from the Covid pandemic and accompanying lockdown restrictions, the rate of activity in the private sector fell at the sharpest pace since November 2012 when the economy was suffering from the after effects of the credit crunch.

Companies reported a fall in customer demand, output and new orders, all accompanied by rising prices which has eased slightly but remain elevated.

“Northern Ireland households may be basking in sunshine but as far as the economy is concerned, storm clouds continue to gather,” Richard Ramsey, Chief Economist at Ulster Bank, said.

The drop in demand across all sectors, with services experiencing the smallest declines in output and new orders. Mr Ramsey said retail has been hit hard.

“Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the cost-of-living crisis, retail recorded the steepest declines in sales and orders. Retail sales have plunged over the last three months and retailers expect sales to be broadly unchanged (i.e. at these lower levels) in twelve months' time.”

Meanwhile, firms within the services and construction industries remain pessimistic about the year ahead with both sectors anticipating lower levels of activity within the next twelve months. Despite a marked drop in orders in recent months, manufacturing is the only sector forecasting a pick-up in activity in that timeframe.

There was, however, at least a small chink of light.