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UK manufacturing still beset by low orders and price pressure, says CBI

about 23 hours ago
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British manufacturing orders remain well below average and price pressure continues to persist, according to a closely watched survey.The CBI industrial trends survey found that manufacturers’ orders for the month were below average in February, while most firms expected to raise their prices and for output to decline over the next three months.The survey compiled by the Confederation of British Industry adds to a mixed picture for the UK economy since the start of the year.Households are feeling “dismal” about their finances, while companies have been cutting staff amid rising cost pressures.However, some business surveys have suggested a rise in optimism among companies since the start of the year after uncertainty over the government’s autumn budget lifted.

The CBI survey said the monthly order book balance for manufacturers stood at -28 in February, up slightly from -30 in January but well below the average of -14,Cameron Martin, a senior economist at the CBI, said: “Many firms continue to report customers holding back amid low confidence and elevated cost pressures,”The CBI survey asks manufacturing firms to state whether conditions are better, worse or the same on a variety of subjects, before taking a net position for responses,Factory output also fell over the three months to February, to a balance of -14, although this was an improvement from -25 in January,Manufacturers expect their output to decline at a broadly similar pace over the next three months.

The survey’s gauge of expected prices over the next three months stood at +26, having risen to +29 in January, the highest reading since February 2023 when Britain was suffering an energy price shock after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.Manufacturing makes up about 9% of the economy, and the Labour government has said removing barriers for the sector’s expansion is a key priority, believing it can play an important part in boosting long-term growth for the UK.In June last year, the government unveiled a new industrial strategy, which will include investing £2bn over the next four years to cut energy prices for thousands of manufacturing businesses.However, this scheme will not be introduced until 2027 and the CBI said it should be bought forward to help manufacturing firms now.“Tackling punitive energy costs will strengthen competitiveness, ease cost of living pressures, and help boost demand across the economy,” it said.

The survey comes as the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB), a lobby group, said many of its members were facing “unparalleled cost pressures” that could soon lead into “deeply uncharted territory in which small business viability may collapse”.Tina McKenzie, the policy chair at the FSB, has written to the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, asking her to implement measures that would help “stem the tide of the rising bills due in April”.
politicsSee all
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Spending even more on defence won’t buy us peace | Letters

We are told to spend even more, and more quickly, on the armed forces, whose current budget for this year is expected to amount to more than £60bn (‘Britain ‘needs to go faster’ on defence spending, Starmer says, 16 February). The Ministry of Defence must surely first show it can put its house in order.The government is considering whether to scrap Ajax, the army’s planned new armoured vehicle, even though more than £6bn of taxpayers’ money has already been spent on the project. Ajax is eight years late, its defects so serious that vibration and noise have made soldiers training on it sick, with some suffering hearing loss.It is the latest and most egregious example of the huge waste caused by the MoD’s incompetence and profligacy over recent years

about 21 hours ago
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Global Counsel calls in administrators, blaming Peter Mandelson ‘maelstrom’

Global Counsel, the advisory firm co-founded by Peter Mandelson, is to collapse into administration, blaming the “maelstrom” caused by revelations about the former peer’s relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Companies including Barclays, Tesco and the Premier League have all deserted Global Counsel, despite the company’s efforts to sever ties with Mandelson and the company’s co-founder Benjamin Wegg-Prosser.The crisis engulfed Global Counsel after it emerged that Mandelson had sought Epstein’s advice on setting up the business in 2010, shortly after leaving office when Labour lost the general election.On Thursday, the Financial Times reported that staff at Global Counsel had been told that the “Peter Mandelson legacy” had effectively capsized the business.In a statement posted on the professional social networking site LinkedIn, Global Counsel confirmed that it had asked a court to appoint Interpath as administrator “to take control of and realise the assets of the company”

about 22 hours ago
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Dual nationals could use expired UK passports to prove they are British, Home Office says

British dual nationals may be able to use expired UK passports to prove to airlines they are British when controversial new immigration rules come into force, the Home Office has said.The new rules, coming into force next Wednesday, require anyone coming into the UK with British dual nationality to present a British passport when boarding a plane, ferry or train or to have a “certificate of entitlement” costing £589 attached to their foreign passport.Airlines and other transport operators risk being fined if they board passengers who do not have the right to enter the destination country.The rules have caused stress, disgust and bafflement among Britons with imminent travel plans whose passports have expired or who do not have a British passport, including children born abroad.The Liberal Democrats have called for a grace period to allow people affected by the change to get new passports, a process that could take many weeks

about 23 hours ago
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Starmer appoints Antonia Romeo as head of civil service

Keir Starmer has appointed Antonia Romeo as the cabinet secretary, the UK’s most senior civil servant, and praised her drive and professionalism.The appointment comes after high-profile criticism of Romeo from a former permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, Simon McDonald. Romeo has been highly praised by other previous secretaries of state as well as the current home secretary, Shabana Mahmood.Romeo, the longest-serving permanent secretary in the civil service, has a reputation as a reformer and has been a more prominent public figure than many of her contemporaries.She has previously faced accusations of bullying related to her time as consul general in New York in 2017 but was cleared by the Cabinet Office

1 day ago
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Ministers must end ‘barking mad’ restraints on civil service pay, union leader warns

Ministers must end “barking mad” restraints on civil service pay or risk being unable to recruit the technical and digital specialists it needs to keep pace, a union leader has warned.Mike Clancy, the Prospect general secretary, said the government should end the “rightwing trope” that restrained the pay of highly skilled civil servants and left government unable to compete with the private sector. He said it should be realistic for senior specialists in competitive fields to be paid more than the prime minister.His intervention comes after the prime minister’s chief secretary, Darren Jones, said he wanted more risk-takers and delivery experts to create a civil service that “moves fast and fixes things”, saying hiring criteria would be changed to “promote the doers, not just the talkers”.Clancy said the civil service had significant issues retaining technical experts because of the low pay and lack of progression

1 day ago
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Countries that do not embrace AI could be left behind, says OpenAI’s George Osborne

The former chancellor George Osborne has said countries that do not embrace the kind of powerful AI systems made by his new employer, OpenAI, risk “Fomo” and could be left weaker and poorer.Osborne, who is two months into a job as head of the $500bn San Francisco AI company’s “for countries” programme, told leaders gathered for the AI Impact summit in Delhi: “Don’t be left behind.” He said that without AI rollouts they could end up with a workforce “less willing to stay put” because they might want to seek AI-enabled fortunes elsewhere.Osborne framed the choice facing countries as one between adopting AI systems produced either in the US – such as Open AI’s – or China. The two superpowers have so far developed the most powerful AI systems

2 days ago
foodSee all
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How to turn any leftover fruit into curd – recipe

2 days ago
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‘Food porn’: are sexy meal pics ruining the restaurant industry?

3 days ago
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In a taste-test battle of supermarket mite-y bites, which will win? (Spoiler: it isn’t Vegemite)

3 days ago
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The secret to perfect roast chicken | Kitchen aide

3 days ago
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Cabbagecore: why are fashionable people going wild for the green vegetable?

4 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy reccipe for crispy baked gnocchi puttanesca | Quick and easy

4 days ago