<p>Britain's economy unexpectedly slowed to a crawl in July as the Delta variant of Covid-19 spread rapidly after lockdown restrictions were eased and as a 'pingdemic' kept many workers at home self-isolating.</p>.<p>Economic output rose just 0.1% in July, the Office for National Statistics said on Friday, the smallest monthly increase since January when Britain went into a new national lockdown.</p>.<p>Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected month-on-month growth of 0.6% in gross domestic product. Only two of the 26 analysts had expected such a weak reading.</p>.<p>Finance minister Rishi Sunak said he was confident that the economy would continue to recover from the pandemic.</p>.<p>But the slowdown in growth may bolster the case of Bank of England officials who think it is premature to talk about withdrawing stimulus, despite growing inflation pressure.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/massive-numbers-of-new-covid-19-infections-not-vaccines-are-the-main-driver-of-new-coronavirus-variants-1028956.html" target="_blank">Massive numbers of new Covid–19 infections, not vaccines, are the main driver of new coronavirus variants</a></strong></p>.<p>Earlier this week, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said he saw a levelling-off in the recovery taking place, with labour shortages, global supply chain problems and Brexit disruption combining to stunt the economic recovery.</p>.<p>"Stalling GDP and rising inflation will leave a whiff of stagflation in the air," said Paul Dales, chief UK economist at the Capital Economics consultancy.</p>.<p>Britain saw a sharp increase in Covid-19 cases in July as the Delta variant spread rapidly, leading to hundreds of thousands of workers being ordered to stay at home under self-isolation rules which have been relaxed.</p>.<p>The ONS said some businesses had complained of staff being unable to come to work because they were required to self-isolate - the so-called pingdemic - and a fall in construction output was linked to post-lockdown problems in global supply chains.</p>.<p><strong>Shoppers rein in spending</strong></p>.<p>The dominant services sector was flat in July from June with output in consumer-facing services falling for the first time since January, driven mostly by a drop in the retail sector.</p>.<p>Industrial output grew by 1.2%, boosted by the return to production of an oil field, but manufacturing was flat.</p>.<p>Construction output fell by a monthly 1.6%.</p>.<p>Early signs of how Britain's economy fared in August have suggested that consumers got back to spending, with unofficial measures of retail sales and broader expenditure bouncing back.</p>.<p>Data published on Thursday showed spending on payment cards returned to 99% of its pre-pandemic level in early September.</p>.<p>But businesses continued to struggle in August with staff shortages and supply chain problems - and it remains to be seen how this week's announcement of tax hikes for workers and employers, to fund health and social care, will affect the economy.</p>.<p>"This week the market voted that the impact would be negative, as the share price of economically sensitive companies such as house-builders fell," said Emma Mogford, fund manager of Premier Miton's Monthly Income Fund.</p>.<p>Separate ONS data showed Britain's goods trade deficit hit a seven-month high in July at 12.7 billion pounds ($17.60 billion), widened by a slowdown in exports to the European Union which have been hit by post-Brexit trade barriers.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>
<p>Britain's economy unexpectedly slowed to a crawl in July as the Delta variant of Covid-19 spread rapidly after lockdown restrictions were eased and as a 'pingdemic' kept many workers at home self-isolating.</p>.<p>Economic output rose just 0.1% in July, the Office for National Statistics said on Friday, the smallest monthly increase since January when Britain went into a new national lockdown.</p>.<p>Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected month-on-month growth of 0.6% in gross domestic product. Only two of the 26 analysts had expected such a weak reading.</p>.<p>Finance minister Rishi Sunak said he was confident that the economy would continue to recover from the pandemic.</p>.<p>But the slowdown in growth may bolster the case of Bank of England officials who think it is premature to talk about withdrawing stimulus, despite growing inflation pressure.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/massive-numbers-of-new-covid-19-infections-not-vaccines-are-the-main-driver-of-new-coronavirus-variants-1028956.html" target="_blank">Massive numbers of new Covid–19 infections, not vaccines, are the main driver of new coronavirus variants</a></strong></p>.<p>Earlier this week, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said he saw a levelling-off in the recovery taking place, with labour shortages, global supply chain problems and Brexit disruption combining to stunt the economic recovery.</p>.<p>"Stalling GDP and rising inflation will leave a whiff of stagflation in the air," said Paul Dales, chief UK economist at the Capital Economics consultancy.</p>.<p>Britain saw a sharp increase in Covid-19 cases in July as the Delta variant spread rapidly, leading to hundreds of thousands of workers being ordered to stay at home under self-isolation rules which have been relaxed.</p>.<p>The ONS said some businesses had complained of staff being unable to come to work because they were required to self-isolate - the so-called pingdemic - and a fall in construction output was linked to post-lockdown problems in global supply chains.</p>.<p><strong>Shoppers rein in spending</strong></p>.<p>The dominant services sector was flat in July from June with output in consumer-facing services falling for the first time since January, driven mostly by a drop in the retail sector.</p>.<p>Industrial output grew by 1.2%, boosted by the return to production of an oil field, but manufacturing was flat.</p>.<p>Construction output fell by a monthly 1.6%.</p>.<p>Early signs of how Britain's economy fared in August have suggested that consumers got back to spending, with unofficial measures of retail sales and broader expenditure bouncing back.</p>.<p>Data published on Thursday showed spending on payment cards returned to 99% of its pre-pandemic level in early September.</p>.<p>But businesses continued to struggle in August with staff shortages and supply chain problems - and it remains to be seen how this week's announcement of tax hikes for workers and employers, to fund health and social care, will affect the economy.</p>.<p>"This week the market voted that the impact would be negative, as the share price of economically sensitive companies such as house-builders fell," said Emma Mogford, fund manager of Premier Miton's Monthly Income Fund.</p>.<p>Separate ONS data showed Britain's goods trade deficit hit a seven-month high in July at 12.7 billion pounds ($17.60 billion), widened by a slowdown in exports to the European Union which have been hit by post-Brexit trade barriers.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>