Chris Williamson, expert at Markit comments on November’s UK PMI survey results
“Fears of a potentially sharp slowdown in the UK economy look overplayed after the PMI surveys showed a welcome combination of sustained strong economic growth and low price pressures in November. The rate of economic growth accelerated for the first time in three months, accompanied by a similar upturn in job creation. Average prices charged for goods and services were meanwhile broadly unchanged, pointing to few inflationary pressures, linked largely to lower global commodity prices.
“The lack of price pressures provides greater leeway for the Bank of England to keep interest rates at their record low for longer, therefore increasing the likelihood of the current growth spurt being sustained.
Growth rebounds in November
“The weighted average Output Index from the three Markit/CIPS PMI surveys rose from a 16-month low of 56.4 in October to 57.8 in November, providing welcome news of a re-acceleration of growth compared to the slowdown seen in the prior two months.
“The upturn may nevertheless be insufficient to prevent the economy slowing in the fourth quarter. The average reading for the fourth quarter so far is the weakest since the second quarter of last year and indicative of the economy growing at a quarterly rate of 0.6%, down from 0.7% in the third quarter. However, this is still an impressively robust pace of expansion which would mean the economy grew 3.0% in 2014.
“At 58.5, the average reading so far over 2014 has been the highest in the survey’s 16-year history, beating the prior record of 57.2 seen in 2006.
“Of the three sectors monitored by the PMI surveys, it was the vast services economy, where the PMI picked up from October’s 17-month low, which provided the boost to the overall pace of expansion in November. The upturn in service sector growth was partly offset, however, by slowdowns in both construction and manufacturing.
Jobs boom
“The survey is also signalling the strongest annual upturn in employment in its 16-year history so far in 2014, with the rate of job creation having picked up again in November. At 55.9, up from 55.5 in October, the weighted average Employment Index from the three Markit/CIPS PMI surveys hit a four-month high. Rates of job creation accelerated in all three sectors.
“The survey is so far roughly consistent with 200,000 jobs being created in the fourth quarter, suggesting the rate of unemployment should continue to fall as the year end approaches. The latest available official data showed the jobless rate running at 6.0% in the three months to September, down sharply from 7.2% at the start of the year.
Subdued price pressures
“The continued strong economic upturn continued to show few signs of stoking inflationary pressures. There are also signs that wage growth is picking up alongside the improving labour market, which should help boost household incomes and consumer spending, but these higher staff costs are being countered by falling fuel prices .Overall input costs rose at one of the weakest rates seen over the past two years, while average selling prices for goods and services were largely unchanged for a second successive month. Input costs fell for a third month running in manufacturing, mainly reflecting lower global commodity prices, notably oil.”