The ITEM club forecasts that unemployment will approach three
million in 2012, representing 9.3% of the UK's labour force
Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA
The UK is likely to already be in recession, according to two
highly regarded economic forecasters, as developments in the
eurozone paralyse the country's recovery.
The Ernst & Young ITEM Club and the Centre for Economics and
Business Research (CEBR) both believe that gross domestic product
(GDP) shrank in the final quarter of last year and will fall again
in the first three months of 2012. A recession is defined as two
consecutive quarters of contracting output.
The prospects for the economy in the UK are closely tied to the
fate of the eurozone, according to both reports, which is hitting
the export trade so crucial to the country's recovery.
The warnings come shortly after France, the second biggest economy
in the eurozone, saw its AAA credit rating downgraded by Standard
& Poor's (S&P) in a move which signals more troubles for
the single currency bloc.
Professor Peter Spencer, chief economic adviser to the Ernst &
Young ITEM Club, said: "Figures for the last quarter of 2011 and
the first quarter of this year are likely to show that we are back
in recession and we are going to have to wait until this summer
before there are any signs of improvement. But it's not going to
be a repeat of 2009 – we are not going to see a serious double
dip."
The ITEM Club report forecasts GDP growth of just 0.2% this year
before increasing to 1.8% in 2013 and 2.8% in 2014.
The ITEM Club said deteriorating levels of confidence will see
business investment stagnate in 2012, while export prospects have
already slowed.
However, the group said UK companies have stronger balance sheets
than in 2009 and have built up large stockpiles of cash, which
will provide a useful insurance policy if the situation
deteriorates further.
The ITEM Club forecasts that investment fell by 2.6% in 2011 and
will grow by just 0.4% in 2012, while unemployment will approach
three million, representing 9.3% of the UK's labour force.
Prof Spencer added: "The only piece of good news for UK households
is that inflation should fall back below 2% this year, as
commodity prices weaken and the VAT rise drops out of the
calculation."
The forecaster said exports accounted for most of last year's
growth, adding 0.9 percentage points to GDP in 2011, but with
weakening demand from the eurozone and concerns over a hard
landing for the Chinese economy, the outlook for 2012 looks much
less promising.
Meanwhile, the CEBR revised down its forecast for growth for 2012
as a whole from 0.7% growth as predicted last October to a decline
of 0.4% with a risk of a more serious decline of 1.1% if
developments in the eurozone are worse than feared.
Douglas McWilliams, one of the report's authors and chief
executive of the CEBR, said: "We take no pleasure in outlining
such a bleak forecast. But the world is going through a
fundamental change where previously poor economies are
industrialising fast."
S&P stripped France of its gold-plated AAA credit rating on
Friday, and also lowered the long-term ratings on Austria, Malta,
Slovakia, and Slovenia, by one notch.
The rating levels for Cyprus, Italy, Portugal and Spain were
dropped two notches.
There was no change for Belgium, Estonia, Finland, Germany,
Ireland, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.
A Treasury spokeswoman said: "The uncertainty in the euro area
continues to have a chilling effect on the UK as well as
elsewhere, but there are reasons to be optimistic: business
surveys showed the UK service and construction sectors
strengthening at the end of 2011, and the government's credible
fiscal plan is helping keep UK interest rates at record lows."