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Second lockdown hits South West economy and jobs

NatWest report shows drop in business activity during November 2020 but optimism that economy will normalise in 2021

Plymouth city centre looking deserted during lockdown(Image: Erin Black)

The South West’s private sector economy shrank in November with more jobs being lost – thanks to the second national lockdown.

A new report shows a steep drop in business activity during the month-long period of anti-coronavirus restrictions, as some businesses had to temporarily close down, with the fastest drop in employment for three months.

But there was optimism that the arrival of a vaccine would lead to the end of the Covid-19 crisis and a return to normality in 2021.

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 – fell from 49.7 in October to 47.1 in November, to signal a second successive monthly decline in business activity.

The South West Business Activity Index reveals how the economy dipped during both 2020 lockdowns

The rate of reduction was solid overall, albeit much slower than those seen during the height of the pandemic.

Companies linked lower business activity to the renewed lockdown measures stemming from the coronavirus pandemic, and a subsequent drop in client demand.

That said, new business fell at a softer pace than seen in October. Nonetheless, firms cut their staff numbers sharply amid further signs of excess capacity and a stronger rise in costs.

However, optimism towards the year ahead picked up to a record high amid hopes of a timely end to the pandemic.