The
Office for National Statistics said Britain's gross domestic product
fell 0.2 percent in the first quarter of 2012 after contracting by 0.3
percent at the end of 2011, confounding forecasts for 0.1 percent
growth.
Most
economists had expected Britain's $2.4 trillion economy to eke out
modest growth in the early 2012, but these forecasts were upset by the
biggest fall in construction output in three years coupled with anaemic
service sector growth and a fall in industrial output.
Wednesday's
figures will be a deep blow for Britain's Conservative / Liberal
Democrat coalition, which has slid in opinion polls since a poorly
received annual budget statement in March and risks embarrassment at
local elections on May 3.
The government is also under pressure over revelations about its close relationship with media tycoon Rupert Murdoch.
The
government desperately needs growth to achieve its overriding goal of
eliminating Britain's large budget deficit over the next five years.
Britain's
economy contracted by 7.1 percent during its 2008-2009 recession and
recovery since has been slow, with headwinds from the euro zone debt
crisis, government spending cuts, high inflation and a damaged banking
sector.
Wednesday's
data showed that output was still 4.3 percent below its peak in the
first quarter of 2008, and the economy has only grown by 0.4 percent
since the government came to power in the second quarter of 2010.
Output
in Britain's service sector - which makes up more than three quarters
of GDP - rose by just 0.1 percent in the first quarter after falling 0.1
percent in Q4 2011, kept down by a fall in output in the large business
services and finance sector.
Industrial
output was 0.4 percent lower, while construction - which accounts for
less than 8 percent of GDP - contracted by 3.0 percent, the biggest fall
since Q1 2009.
Britain's Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts growth of 0.8 percent this year.
Wednesday's data shows that first quarter output was no higher than a year earlier.
The
Bank of England has warned that there is a risk of another contraction
in the second quarter of 2012, due to an extra public holiday.
But
unlike during the previous two quarters, it does not appear keen to
provide further monetary stimulus through quantitative easing asset
purchases, due to above-target inflation which looks stickier than
before.
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