According to Office for National Statistics said that the slower pace in the
January-to-March period was due mainly to the service sector, which sank
to 0.3% growth against 0.8% at the end of 2016.
In the last quarter of 2016, gross domestic product increased by 0.7%.
Friday's figure is a first estimate and could be revised in the coming months.
Economists
had been expecting GDP growth to slow as consumers reined back spending
in the face of rising inflation, but they had pencilled in a higher
figure of 0.4%.
Chris Williamson, chief economist, IHS Markit,
said: "The message is clear: the start of the year saw the weakest pace
of growth for a year as rising prices have started to hit household
spending."
The main drag on the service industry, which accounts
for about 78% of the UK economy, came from the hotels, restaurants and
the distributions sector, which fell by 0.5%, as increasing prices from
rising inflation applied the brakes to retail trade,
The ONS said
that output in the construction sector was also dragging on GDP after
expanding by 0.2% in the first three months of the year following 1%
growth in the fourth quarter of 2016.
Industrial production
expanded by 0.3% over the period, with manufacturing increasing by 0.5%
thanks to a jump in motor vehicle output, while agriculture growth eased
to 0.3% in the first quarter from 1% in the final quarter of 2016.
'Caution and uncertainty'
Consumers
have been feeling the pinch since the beginning of 2017, with inflation
sitting at its joint highest level for more than three years at 2.3% in
March.
The squeeze on household spending power has led to weaker
retail sales, which recorded their biggest fall for seven years in the
three months to March.
Nancy Curtin, chief investment officer at Close Brothers Asset Management, said the data would add to uncertainties.
"With
the General Election just around the corner and Brexit negotiations
afoot, any dip in the economy risks bringing further caution and
uncertainty to businesses, which has a knock-on effect when it comes to
investment and employment.
"However the chancellor, with better
than expected Budget tax receipts in his pocket, has room for manoeuvre
and should be able to pre-empt any further slowdown which should help
with business confidence," she said.
Suren Thiru, head of
economics at the British Chambers of Commerce, said the data confirmed
his group's own survey that businesses were starting to feel the
pressure.
"It is increasingly likely that the slowdown in the
first quarter is the start of a sustained period of more sluggish
growth. Inflation is expected to continue to rise, increasing the
squeeze on consumer spending power and firm's profit margins, pushing
growth lower," he said.
'Forging ahead'
Despite the service sector slowdown, other economists pointed to more positive signs.
Lee
Hopley, chief economist at EEF the manufacturers' group, that "even
with the pace of expansion dropping, we shouldn't be too hasty in
dialling up the despair about the outlook for the UK economy.
"There
are clearer signs that the consumer is wavering as inflationary
pressures have picked up, but the production related sectors of the
economy are forging ahead thanks to an improving global picture and the
more competitive pound.
"Manufacturing also saw another solid
quarter with output increasing by 0.5% and official data indicating that
this positive trend was fairly broad based across sub-sectors."
The
caution among consumers was underlined on Friday in separate figures
from the British Bankers' Association. These showed British banks
approved the fewest mortgages in four months in March and consumer
credit growth slowed.
Banks approved 41,061 mortgages for house
purchase last month, down from 42,247 in February, the BBA said. Annual
consumer lending growth slowed to 6.1% from 6.5% in February, easing
further from October's 10-year high of 7.2%.
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