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Cost pressures amid Ukraine crisis causing 'mounting concern' for South West firms recovering from pandemic

There was a rise in business activity in the region last month but there are fears this could be "hampered" in the months ahead

An aerial view of Bristol city centre (Image: Getty Images)

Companies in the South West are continuing to recover from Covid disruption, but many have mounting concerns over cost pressures amid rising inflation and the invasion of Ukraine, new data has revealed.

There was a “sharp and accelerated” expansion of business activity in the region last month, according to the data from NatWest - but concerns over increased costs and ongoing supply chain disruption weighed on overall business confidence.

The headline NatWest South West 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 – increased from 54.0 in January to 59.6 in February. The rate of growth was the quickest seen for seven months and was similar to that seen at the national level.

Average input costs faced by South West private sector firms continued to increase in February, while inflation quickened to a three-month high. Input prices also rose rapidly across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ as a whole.

According to the survey, higher costs for energy, fuel, staff and materials pushed up expenses in the latest survey period.

The report said South West companies were passing on some of the extra cost to customers in the form of higher prices. Output charges have now risen in each of the past 14 months, with the latest increase the sharpest since last October. However, the rate of inflation remained below the national average.

On a more positive note, South West private sector firms signalled a further acceleration of new order growth last month, with new business expanding at the quickest rate for three months.

Optimism towards the 12-month outlook for output has weakened since January but remained “robust” and well above the long-run survey average (66.8), NatWest said.