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Businesses across the North East scale back output as demand wanes

Firms suffered a sixth successive month of shrinking new business levels.

Part of Newcastle and Gateshead(Image: handout from Bowmer and Kirkland)

Businesses in the North East are cutting jobs as the region's private sector economy suffered its fastest decline in more than a year during October, a new survey suggests.

Just days after official figures showed the national economy was broadly flat, data from the monthly NatWest North East PMI indicates that levels of new business in the region shrank for the sixth month in a row. The seasonally adjusted index, which measures change in the manufacturing and service sectors, showed a reading of 43.5 in October, down from 43.7 in September, which is the sharpest fall in 14-months.

It means the North East suffered the fastest fall in output of all 12 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regions monitored. Responding firms talked of a reduction in new orders and weak demand conditions across the private sector, as well as destocking action and the loss of contracts.

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Amid higher operating costs - which increased during October but at the weakest rate in three years - and the deteriorating new business trend, the region's firms shed jobs. It was the fourth successive month of workforce cuts as businesses chose not to backfill vacancies, meaning the North East registered the fastest jobs decline of all regions in the survey.

The rate of price inflation was equal to September as higher amounts charges for goods and services factored in costs passed on to customers. Researchers said firms had used the month to clear backlogs while incoming contracts and orders remained slow. And although sharp, the pace of reduction slowed from September.

Despite the gloomy trends, business operators' confidence showed some resilience, on average remaining positive across the month. But worries over the economic climate did mean confidence is historically subdued and only Northern Ireland reported weaker optimism.