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PRIVACY
Regional Development

East Midlands business activity sees solid decline in November

According to NatWest, ‘cost-of-living crisis and pressure on company cashflow likely to hamper demand further’

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ output is being affected by rising inflation

Business activity in the East Midlands continued to fall in November, with new orders down and costs up, according to NatWest.

The bank’s monthly survey of industry leaders suggests the region also saw the first recorded decrease in employment since January 2021 – echoing latest Government figures – which was put down to growing redundancies and people leaving not being replaced.

The monthly East Midlands PMI Business Activity Index suggested the region suffered an economic decline last month that was only outpaced by Scotland, the South West and Northern Ireland.

Those surveyed said the downturn was driven by weak client demand and pressure on customer’s disposable incomes amid the cost-of-living crisis. Inflationary pressures also contributed.

The rate of contraction in new orders quickened for the second month running and was the fastest since May 2020. With the exception of Northern Ireland, the region registered the strongest decrease in client demand of the 12 monitored º£½ÇÊÓÆµ areas.

However the bank said the November data signalled a stronger degree of confidence among East Midlands firms regarding the outlook for output over the coming year.

The level of positive sentiment was greater than the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average and was the highest since May. That said, output expectations were weaker than the series trend.

Businesses said that average input costs – including raw materials, staff, energy, fuel and rent – rose markedly again in November, with the pace of increase accelerating at a sharper rate in the East Midlands than anywhere else.