Oil price shock likely to ‘push the UK economy into recession’

The oil price shock hitting the global economy could push the UK into recession, Tomasz Wieladek, chief European macro economist at investment managent firm T. Rowe Price, is warning this morning.

Wieladek says the UK’s economy’s failure to grow in January show that it was weak even before the oil shock, which is likely to hit consumer spending and create more cost of living pressures.

Following today’s weaker-than-expected GDP report, Wieladek writes:

double quotation markUK GDP growth stagnated in January, far weaker than market expectations of a 0.2% month-on-month pickup. The weakness was driven by services, the main part of the UK economy, and can be partially explained by tight monetary policy and the fiscal policy consolidation the UK is currently experiencing. Both of these policies are reducing demand, and the data is beginning to show it. Furthermore, AI is likely reducing hiring in the services sector, which in turn is leading to higher unemployment and softer demand. Overall, the UK economy has been weak ahead of the most recent oil shock.

The war in the Middle East and the consequent oil price rise will raise inflation and reduce consumer spending. The associated tightening in financial conditions we have seen in the bond market will exacerbate these effects. There will be significant demand destruction going forward.

The UK has been one of the weakest advanced economies in terms of recent growth performance. Therefore, the current oil price shock will most likely not just lead to inflation, but also push the UK economy into recession, raising unemployment and reducing GDP. Stagflation is just around the corner.

This puts the Bank of England (BoE) into a difficult position, he adds:

double quotation markOn the one hand, the BoE’s inflation-target credibility has weakened, as UK inflation has been higher and more persistent than elsewhere. On the other hand, a recession is likely. What should the BoE do? The key to easing financial conditions and supporting the recovery from the recession is to ease the current financial tightening. The best way to achieve this is to keep policy tight and publicly commit to reaching the 2% target at all costs.

A hawkish approach to monetary policy can kill two birds with one stone in this situation. Inflation credibility can be restored, and financial conditions will ease, as inflation risk premia get priced out. The BoE should keep rates on hold and prepare the public for the prospect of further hikes.

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Key events

UK assets falling

The pound, and the UK stock market, are both falling this morning.

Sterling is down three-quarters of a cent against the US dollar at $1.3263, approaching the three-month low set last week.

The FTSE 100 index of blue-chip shares is down too – losing 58 points or 0.56% at 10,247 points.

The more domestically focused FTSE 250 index is down 0.7%.

Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, says:

double quotation mark“UK markets opened lower this morning, weighed down by a softer‑than‑expected GDP print and ongoing tensions in the Middle East. The economy failed to grow at all in January, suggesting activity was already subdued even before the recent jump in energy prices began to bite.

That’s starting to force a rethink of this year’s outlook, with previous 1.0% growth expectations now looking optimistic – with some scenarios pointing to closer to 0.6%, 0.4% or even 0.1%, depending on how long elevated energy costs stick around.

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