Friday, September 20, 2024

East Midlands economic recovery slows as businesses grapple with uncertainty and price rises

The brakes are being applied to job creation, sales and investment in the East Midlands as economic growth slows down, new research reveals.

Every indicator of economic activity recorded a drop between the third and fourth quarters of 2021 in East Midlands Chamber’s Quarterly Economic Survey, while confidence was also down.

It was also the first time the State of the Economy Index – which aggregates the various indicators to rate the region’s economic health – fell since the beginning of the pandemic, having grown consistently since Q2 2020.

Chris Hobson, director of policy and external affairs at East Midlands Chamber, said: “The reading of our State of the Economy Index will be a disappointment for businesses and indicates an economy that continues to grow, but at a rate of pace that is slowing.

“To put it another way, over the past few months, the brakes have started to be applied to parts of our economy.

“When we dig a little deeper, we can see the reality for many businesses. They are having to contend with rising prices for raw materials and staffing, which is putting the squeeze on margins.

“While many businesses spent much of 2021 trying to stave off passing these price rises on to support competitiveness, additional pressures at the end of the year, including increased energy costs, seem to have provided the proverbial straw to break the camel’s back.”

Just under 400 businesses across Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire took part in the survey between 1 and 22 November.

Key findings from the survey for the East Midlands included:

  • UK sales were down by 9% in Q4 compared to Q3, while UK advanced orders reduced by 17%
  • Overseas sales and orders were down by 3% and 1% respectively
  • The proportion of businesses that increased their workforce fell by 8% (a net 25% of organisations grew headcount in Q3 compared to 17% in Q4), while there was a 3% drop (from a net 38% in Q3 to 35% in Q4) in those saying they expect to employ more staff in the next three months
  • The rate of improvement for cashflow dropped by 10% at the same time as 62% of organisations (up from 46% in Q3) were concerned about future price rises
  • There was a 2% drop in the proportion of businesses intending to invest in machinery and a 7% in those anticipating investment in training staff
  • Confidence on turnover and profitability improvements dropped by 3% and 8% respectively

Chris added: “Demand levels remain strong, but increasingly businesses are turning down opportunities in order to ensure they can honour existing commitments.

“This time last year, 29% of respondents told us they were operating at full capacity – this has now grown to 42%, meaning less headroom in the economy to take on new work.

“Part of that restricted capacity story is about people. While 64% of businesses attempted to recruit, eight in 10 of those struggled to find the right skills, which in part explains the increased staffing costs as businesses seek to attract and retain the talent.”

He suggested one path out of the economic slowdown is to invest in both machinery and training, growing productivity and adding to capacity levels, but renewed concerns around potential Covid-19 lockdown restrictions could dent the confidence among businesses to spend.

Looking ahead, Chris identifies high demand as a cause for optimism of a prosperous new year – provided restrictions to tackle the Omicron variant aren’t tightened further.

He added: “If businesses can be given the confidence to invest, if policy can support recruitment and if the global surge in activity starts to level out so supply chains can find their pattern, there’s no reason why the pace of growth won’t pick up again in 2022.

“And in conversations with businesses, they believe many of these things will happen – the current pressures are only temporary readjustments and will be resolved at some point next year.”

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