UK: The Good Times And Economic Recovery As COVID-19 Recedes

 | May 07, 2021 11:49AM ET

Falling Covid-19 prevalence and widespread vaccinations have boosted confidence in the durability of the recovery. Several data points are at post-pandemic highs and that suggests second-quarter growth could hit 5%. Away from Covid-19, the main risks are politics-related; Brexit disruption is ongoing, while Scottish independence is back in focus.

Pretty much wherever you look, there are signs that the UK economy’s long winter is starting to thaw.

What’s particularly interesting is that several indicators – from the PMIs to transport usage – are now higher than they were last summer, when restrictions were at their pre-second wave low. That's despite the economy having only having partially reopened - shops are no longer closed, but restaurants and bars are only able to operate outdoors.

This latest upturn in the data partly just tells us that businesses and consumers are becoming more adept at living with restrictions. First-quarter GDP is likely to be considerably ‘less bad’ than first feared. But it also reflects growing confidence in the durability of the recovery. For instance, consumer confidence has surged over the past couple of months, helping March retail sales to exceed pre-virus levels even before shops had reopened.

h2 UK data has begun to outperform last summer's highs