The UK's service sector helped the
economy to grow faster than expected in the three months after the
Brexit vote, official figures have indicated.
The economy expanded by 0.5% in the July-to-September period, according to the Office for National Statistics.
That was slower than the 0.7% rate in the previous quarter, but stronger than analysts' estimates of about 0.3%.
"There is little evidence of a pronounced effect in the immediate aftermath of the vote," the ONS said.
The
stronger than expected growth will further dampen expectations that the
Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee will cut interest rates
next week.
Welcoming the figures, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Phillip
Hammond said: "The fundamentals of the UK economy are strong and today's
data show that the economy is resilient."
However, Labour's
Shadow Treasury Minister, Jonathan Reynolds said: "Continued
disappointing, sluggish growth shows the failures of the Tories'
economic approach after six years in power, especially for the
manufacturing sector which shows little sign of benefiting from lower
sterling.
Dominant services
The economy was boosted by a particularly strong performance from the services sector, which grew by 0.8% in the quarter.
Transport,
storage and communication was the strongest part of the service sector,
growing by 2.2%. That was the fastest pace since 2009 and was helped by
a healthy quarter for the UK's film industry. The latest films in the
Jason Bourne and Star Trek franchises were released in July along with
other popular productions, lifting takings at box offices.
ONS chief economist Jo Grice said "A strong performance in the
dominant services industries continued to offset further falls in
construction, while manufacturing continued to be broadly flat."
This
is the first estimate of economic growth for the period, using less
than half the data that will be used for the final estimate.
While growth in the services sector was robust, the construction
sector contracted by 1.4% and industrial production fell 0.4%, with
manufacturing output down 1%.
"In manufacturing, the contraction
in output should be attributed to some unwinding of the massive growth
spike seen in the second quarter, rather than industry scaling back
production for any referendum related reasons," said Lee Hopley, chief
economist at the EEF, the manufacturers' organisation.
"In line
with the raft of survey data the GDP estimates confirm that it has been
more or less business as usual but it doesn't tell us, however, if this
will continue for the foreseeable future."
'Resilient'
No
in-depth breakdown of consumer spending was released in this set of
figures, but Howard Archer, UK economist at IHS Global Insight, said:
"It looks certain that third-quarter growth was also heavily dependent
on consumers' willingness to keep spending, supported by still decent
purchasing power and high employment.
"Consumer spending also
clearly benefited from the weakened pound encouraging spending by
overseas visitors to the UK. The weakened pound also supported foreign
orders for UK goods and services."
However, the "resilient"
post-referendum performance does not say anything about the UK's ability
to perform outside of the EU, said Berenberg's senior UK economist,
Kallum Pickering.
"Today's data does not alter our long-term view
that Brexit will lower UK trend growth, to around 1.8% from 2.2% per
year, via less trade, migration and investment with its major market,
the EU," he added.
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