Living standards won't recover to pre-pandemic levels until 2027

Wednesday 22nd March 2023 06:01 EDT
 

People face their biggest fall in spending power for 70 years as the surging cost of living eats into wages. The government's independent forecaster said that household incomes - once rising prices were taken into account - would drop by 6% this year and next. Living standards won't recover to pre-pandemic levels until 2027, it warned.
It came as Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the economy would shrink this year but avoid recession. Energy and food bills have shot up due to the war in Ukraine and pandemic, and are squeezing household budgets. Inflation is currently in double digits. It is set to more than halve to 2.9% by the end of this year, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). But for now, the figure remains very high, and well ahead of average wages.
The drop in real household disposable income would represent "the largest two-year fall in living standards since records began in the 1950s," Richard Hughes, chairman of the OBR, said. "We think households are going to dip into some of their savings to help manage the squeeze on living standards and that supports growth in the near term," he added.
The OBR looks at the government's tax and spending plans in the Budget and then predicts how the country will perform over the next five years. Previously it had expected the UK to fall into recession at the end of last year and continue to shrink all of this year. A recession is usually defined as when an economy gets smaller for two three-month periods - or quarters - in a row. The last time the UK's economy went into recession was in 2020, at the height of the coronavirus pandemic. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the predictions from the OBR were "proving the doubters wrong". But Labour criticised the announcements made during the Budget as "dressing up stagnation as stability". IFS director Paul Johnson said the OBR "expects the economy to grow a bit faster in the short-term, and a bit slower in the medium-term". This would combine to create an economy that was "0.6% larger in real-terms in 2027-28 than under the autumn forecast," he said.


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