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UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of...

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UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures
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Page 1: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures

Page 2: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

GDP and Sector AccountsKey Figures

• GDP growth for Q2 revised up to -0.4% from -0.5%(Note “GDP growth for Q2” means how GDP changed between Q1

and Q2 of 2012)

• Production -0.7%, Construction -3.0%, Services -0.1%• GDP growth for 2011 = 0.9%• Household final consumption expenditure -0.2%• Household saving ratio 6.7% in 2012 Q2• Real household disposable income growth +1.9% in

2012 Q2

Page 3: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

Balance of payments

• Current account deficit widened to £20.8 billion in 2012 Q2 (£15.4 billion in 2012 Q1), the highest on record and the highest as a percentage of GDP at 5.4%

• Driven by:• £3.2 billion increase in the income deficit to

£5.2 billion in 2012 Q2, due to an increase in the deficit in investment income

• £2.0 billion increase in the trade deficit to £10.1 billion in 2012 Q2, due to an increase in the deficit in trade in goods

Page 4: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

GDP Revisions for Q2 2012Release GDP growth rate Data content Information

released

Month 1 -0.7% 44% GDP(Output)

Month 2 -0.5% 83% GDP(Output), GDP(Income) and GDP(Expenditure)

Month 3 -0.4% 92% GDP(O), GDP(I) and GDP(E), and additional information.....

Page 5: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

GDP Growth and ‘Special Events’

£357,324bn £357,477bn

Try to guess the “special events” that affected or are likely to affect GDP growth

Page 6: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

Government spending and GDP(E)

Households

Government

NPISH

GFCF

Trade

So how would the GDP figures be affected if the government suddenly stopped spending?

Page 7: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

New Information at Month Three (1)

Can you describe and explain this graph?

Page 8: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

New information (2) What can you say about the graph before and after the 08/09 recession?

Page 9: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

Office for Budget Responsibility Growth Forecast What kind of forecasts do you think this

office would give? Optimistic? Pessimistic?

Now seeing the forecasts, do you think they are optimistic or pessimistic about UK GDP growth?

Page 10: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

The ‘Productivity Puzzle/GDP Conundrum/Paradox’

Pre-recession Employment is nearly back to it’s 2008 level . . .

. . . but GDP is not

See Notes

Why do you think this is called the “Productivity Puzzle”?

Page 11: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

Change in the Type of Employment

One way to explain the puzzle: Part time employment has been rising.

Try to outline why this helps explain the productivity puzzle/GDP conundrum.

Page 12: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

An Increase in UnderemploymentAnother way to explain the puzzle:Underemployment has been rising and Over employment falling.

What do you think underemployment and overemployment are?(See notes) Try to outline why this helps

explain the productivity puzzle/GDP conundrum.

Page 13: UK Economic Situation April – June 2012 (Quarter 2 of 2012 or 2012 Q2) The third revision of figures.

Conclusions

The contraction of GDP has been revised upward but this doesn’t change the economic picture

Government expenditure has held up the economy

Improvement in disposable income, providing much needed relief to households.

OBR growth forecast looks optimistic given Q2 GDP figures

Labour market more resilient than output the “Productivity Puzzle”


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