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UK private sector shrinking as firms cut jobs; pressure to raise taxes as government borrowing jumps – business live


UK private sector shrinking in May as firms cut jobs

Britain’s private sector is shrinking for the second month running as factory output falls at the fastest rate in a year and a half, a new survey shows.

The latest poll of purchasing managers at UK companies found that private sector output is decreasing in May, although at a slower rate than in April.

Manufacturing production fell at the fastest rate since October 2023, although this was moderated by a “fractional rise” in service sector output.

UK firms reported that clients were cautious this month, due to business uncertainty, leading to a drop in new orders. However, worries about US tariffs have dropped this month, after Donald Trump delayed tariffs on America’s trading partners and agreed a trade deal with the UK.

Export orders fell this month, which manufacturers blamed on the new US 10% tariff on UK imports, and on wider uncertainty about global trade condititions.

Worryingly, manufacturers reported that they cut jobs at the fastest pace in five years, through redundancies, restructurings, hiring freezes, and the non-replacement of departing staff. This was blamed on subdued demand, and higher payroll costs – following the increase in national insurance contributions at the start of April.

Overall, the UK PMI composite index rose to 49.4, up from April’s 48.5, but still below the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction.

More evidence that the strong GDP growth reported in Q1 was a flash in the pan…

UK PMI Composite Output Index recovered a bit in May, to 49.4, but still consistent with falling activity in the private sector.

source: https://t.co/7ZOmOLtxrL pic.twitter.com/Bjkrc2tBxv

— Julian Jessop (@julianHjessop) May 22, 2025

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G7 draft warns of ‘excessive imbalances’ in global economy

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda, Japanese Minister of Finance Katsunobu Kato and Canadian Finance Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne with Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers during the G7 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting in Banff, Alberta, Canada, this week. Photograph: Todd Korol/Reuters

Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of Seven nations pledged to address “excessive imbalances” in the global economy, according to a draft communique seen by Bloomberg News.

G7 finance ministers and central bank chiefs have been meeting in Alberta, Canada, in the last few days, with the meeting to wrap up later today.

According to Bloomberg, the draft communique – which summarises three days of meetings between the US, UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan – says a common understanding of how “non-market policies and practices” undermine international economic security is needed.

Today at the G7 Summit in Banff, I enjoyed my first meeting with Chancellor and Minister of Finance @larsklingbeil of Germany, during which I was pleased to hear his insights on the new German government’s economic priorities. pic.twitter.com/3v6dCrKlUn

— Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (@SecScottBessent) May 21, 2025

The draft calls for an analysis of “market concentration and international supply chain resilience,” and that officials agreed “on the importance of a level playing field and taking a broadly coordinated approach to address the harm caused by those who do not abide by the same rules and lack transparency.”

More here.





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