In the three months to August, output fell by 0.8%, the biggest such decline since March 2013. Meanwhile, the UK trade deficit was £3.3bn in August, a narrowing of £1.2bn from July, it said. But the deficit was larger than expected and is set to weigh on growth, the ONS added.
An ONS official said the weak figures for construction in August may have been linked to wet weather during the month.
Housebuilding
fell by 3% from July and output in other parts of the sector also
contracted for the first across-the-board decline since 2010.
The trade figures showed the UK's deficit in its trade in goods
narrowed to £11.1bn in August compared with £12.2bn in July, although
some analysts had expected it to shrink further.
The deficit of £11.1bn on goods was partly offset by a £7.9bn surplus on services. Exports increased by £0.8bn, boosted by cars.
'Double blow'
The
combined goods deficit for July and August is already twice that of the
previous quarter, and is likely to have a negative effect on overall
GDP growth.
The UK's economy grew by 0.7% in the second quarter of
the year, but Howard Archer of IHS Global Insight said overall growth
prospects for the third quarter had received a "double blow" from the
construction and trade data, which was "seriously bad news overall".
"Overall,
the data reinforce our belief that GDP growth is likely be no better
than 0.5% quarter-on-quarter in the third quarter, and there is now a
significant risk that it could have been weaker still."
David
Kern, chief economist of the British Chambers of Commerce, said: "The
large trade deficit remains a major national problem. Greater efforts
are needed to support our exporters and to secure a long-term
improvement in our trading position."
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