The pinging of the NHS app may be a bell tolling for economic recovery

There was a time, in the wake of the first wave of COVID-19, that politicians and economists yearned for a V-shaped recovery – an immediate bounce-back from the financial devastation of lockdowns.

The second wave put paid to that, and as we tiptoe out of the most recent restrictions, the line drawn by GDP is starting to look more like an England supporter’s ECG than a smooth path back to economic health.

For the third consecutive month, GDP growth slowed in May. The increase of 0.8% was a fourth consecutive month of growth – almost inevitable given the restrictions on personal and professional life that applied at the start of 2021 – but only half of what had been forecast.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sunak hint over change to ‘pinging’

What growth there was came from hospitality where restaurants and hotels, closed to indoor trade by government order until 17 May, saw a 37.1% increase in business, and the sector as a whole contributed almost all of the monthly growth.

Advertisement

Without the easing of restrictions the economy would have been flatlining as supply bottlenecks and lingering consumer reticence constrained spending.

The biggest drag on GDP came courtesy of the global microchip shortage that has slowed vehicle production lines and delayed production of consumer electronics. Transport manufacturing fell 16.5% in the month and, while recovery is under way, chip producers say shortages will linger until the end of the year.

More on Covid-19 COVID-19: England’s R number rises slightly as infection rates hit four-month highs in parts of UK COVID-19: Plan to allow vaccinated people from abroad into UK without quarantine to be revealed in ‘next couple of weeks’ COVID-19: GDP grew 0.8% in May falling short of economists’ expectations and 3.1% below pre-pandemic peak COVID-19: Bookings for flights to amber list countries up by 400% after no-quarantine announcement COVID-19: Sunak urges workers to return to the office as ministers plan to make NHS COVID app ‘less sensitive’ COVID-19: Only 0.005% of coronavirus deaths have been children – so vaccine would have to be ‘very low risk’

The economy remains 3.1% smaller than pre-crisis, and while continued easing of restrictions means economic activity is likely to increase, some have pushed back expectations of when it will return to the pre-COVID levels of February 2020 from August to October.

A key factor will be consumer confidence as legal restrictions are dropped and our COVID security becomes dependent on the personal choices made by others.

The impact of a new wave of cases on businesses’ ability to function will also be crucial. The pinging of the NHS app may be a bell tolling for economic recovery.