UK is fastest-growing G7 member after economy expands by 0.7% – business live | Business


UK was fastest-growing G7 member in Q1 2025

Britain has outpaced major international rivals for growth in the first quarter of this year, by accelerating in January-March.

The UK’s 0.7% growth in Q1 2025 shows it was the fastest-growing economy in the G7 during the last quarter – a clear boost for the government this morning.

In contrast, the eurozone only grew by 0.4% in the last quarter, while US GDP contracted slightly due to a surge of imports to beat Donald Trump’s trade war.

Now, we don’t get Japan’s GDP report until tomorrow morning (a small contraction is expected), and Canada’s data is only an early estimate.

But as things stand, here’s the G7 growth league table:

  • UK: +0.7% growth

  • Canada: estimated to have grown by 0.4%

  • Italy: 0.3% growth

  • Germany: 0.2% growth

  • France: 0.1% growth

  • US: -0.075% (or -0.3% on an annualised basis)

  • Japan: reporting tomorrow, -0.1% forecast

UK GDP growth of 0.7% QoQ in Q1 2025 (+0.5% on a per capita basis) puts the UK at the top of the G7 league table. Encouraging underlying resilience, although recent surveys (PMIs, labour market surveys) since April tax and trade changes do point to a considerable slowdown in Q2. pic.twitter.com/4mZpkfUWI7

— Simon French (@Frencheconomics) May 15, 2025

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Economists fear growth rebound is unlikely to last

Disappointingly, economists are predicting that the UK won’t sustain its strong growth.

The Resolution Foundation thinktank fears UK growth stumbled in April – the month when Donald Trump’s trade wars rattled the world economy.

Simon Pittaway, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, says:

“The UK economy has made a stronger than expected start to 2025, growing at a healthy 0.7 per cent.

“But this growth rebound is unlikely to last, with data for April looking far weaker, and huge tariff-shaped clouds hanging over the global economy.

“These growth headwinds are all the more alarming given Britain’s recent economic record – with GDP per person still lower today than it was before the pandemic.”

Matt Swannell, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club, predicts that quarterly GDP growth across the rest of this year is likely to be slower than in Q1, explaining:

In part, this is because the activity data in Q1 was probably boosted by some residual seasonality. However, tighter fiscal policy, the lagged effect of past interest rate rises, and the imposition of higher US tariffs on goods exports from the UK and the rest of the world mean we also expect the underlying pace of output growth to remain modest throughout this year.”





Source link

Previous Article

5 Summer 2025 Trends That'll Make You Look Like a Fashion Person

Next Article

Saudi price war looks like unspoken gift to Trump: Bousso