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Economic Development

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy not heading into recession, Bank of England deputy governor says

Sir Jon Cunliffe said there was some slowing in the economy and growing concerns that Brexit uncertainty was impacting on investment

(Image: Birmingham Post)

The Bank of England’s deputy governor does not believe the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is heading towards a recession, despite growing signs of a slowdown in the economy.

Sir Jon Cunliffe, a member of the Bank’s financial and monetary policy committees, was speaking on a visit to Newcastle where he met a number of North East businesses across a range of sectors.

Sir Jon said there was a “positive and constructive” message from businesses in the region, though people had concerns around Brexit and the state of the global economy.

He said there were particular concerns that Brexit was holding up investment decisions across a wide range of businesses, which had become a bigger issue than on his last visit to the region two years ago.

Analysts have predicted that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy could contract in the second quarter of 2019, coming after surveys of the construction, manufacturing and services sectors at the start of July pointed to a slowdown in economic activity.

But Sir Jon said a number of factors around Brexit deadlines - first in March, then April, and now moved back to October - had increased stockpiling and made it hard to accurately analyse the state of the economy.

He said: “I haven’t picked up a strong sense that the economy is contracting and people are seeing big drops in demand.

“The economy is really difficult to read at the moment on monthly and quarterly figures. We had a weak end to 2018 and a strong beginning to 2019 but the first quarter of 2019 was strong primarily because of stockbuilding in advance of Brexit and people taking on warehousing space.