UK businesses brace for economic gloom in 2025

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UK businesses brace for economic gloom in 2025
Author: Millie Cooke
Published: Dec, 23 2024 00:01

After Rachel Reeves’s controversial Budget, the Confederation of British Industry warns the economy is ‘headed for the worst of all worlds’. Businesses say they are “battening down the hatches” in fears over economic gloom in the new year as the fallout from Rachel Reeves’s Budget continues.

 [Family businesses ‘are cutting agencies, stopping recruitment, shedding staff, cancelling bonuses’, warns IBN chair John Longworth]
Image Credit: The Independent [Family businesses ‘are cutting agencies, stopping recruitment, shedding staff, cancelling bonuses’, warns IBN chair John Longworth]

A major survey by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) found firms are expecting to reduce both output and hiring, adding to the wider picture of a jittery economy in the second half of the year. The results will be a blow to the government, which has put economic growth at the heart of its mission. But expectations for growth are now at their weakest since the aftermath of Liz Truss’s chaotic tenure in No 10.

 [Manufacturing output is expected to fall sharply in the three months to March]
Image Credit: The Independent [Manufacturing output is expected to fall sharply in the three months to March]

The chancellor’s hike to employers’ national insurance, which was unveiled in October and is expected to rake in around £25bn a year, was highlighted as one of the reasons for the gloomy outlook. Alpesh Paleja, the CBI’s interim deputy chief economist, warned the economy is “headed for the worst of all worlds”.

 [The Bank of England held interest rates at 4.75 per cent last week as it cautioned over ‘heightened uncertainty in the economy’]
Image Credit: The Independent [The Bank of England held interest rates at 4.75 per cent last week as it cautioned over ‘heightened uncertainty in the economy’]

Rachel Reeves has previously defended her decision to raise taxes at the Budget, insisting her plan provided the stability needed to secure growth. “Now we have fixed the foundations of our economy, I am going for growth”, the chancellor said after the October fiscal event.

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