UK, Japan enter recession

The British economy fell into recession at the end of 2023 as output shrank more than anticipated in the final 3 months of the year, official figures showed Thursday.
Japan had unexpectedly slipped into a recession at the end of last year, losing its title as the world’s third-biggest economy to Germany and raising doubts about when the central bank would begin to exit its decade-long ultra-loose monetary policy.
The Office for National Statistics estimated that economic activity, as measured by gross domestic product, declined by 0.3 per cent in the 4th quarter of the year from the previous 3-month period, with all 3 main sectors — services, industrial production and construction — down. That was far more than the 0.1 per cent decline anticipated by economists.
The quarterly decline followed a 0.1 per cent fall in the previous 3-month period and highlights how the economy has been hobbled by high interest rates that have been raised to reduce inflation. A recession is officially defined as 2 straight quarters of economic decline.
It is the first time the British economy has fallen into recession since the first half of 2020, when output dived during the coronavirus pandemic.
The figures deal a blow to the governing Conservative Party ahead of a general election this year, the date of which will be determined by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Being in recession is hardly the ideal backdrop for a party that is heavily trailing the main opposition Labour Party in opinion polls.
The hope is that the Bank of England will soon start cutting interest rates as inflation falls back toward its 2 per cent target. Inflation currently stands at 4 per cent. Though interest rates appear to have peaked, the central bank has expressed caution about cutting interest rates too soon as lower borrowing rates may bolster spending and put renewed upward pressure on prices.
The Bank of England has managed to get inflation down from a 4-decade high of more than 11 per cent by raising its main interest rate aggressively from near zero to 5.25 per cent from late 2022 until August last year.