The UK economy flatlined in July, with gross domestic product () showing no growth compared to June, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). This follows a 0.4% in June, highlighting a sharp slowdown in momentum entering the third quarter.
While services and construction posted modest gains, fell 0.9%, and dropped 1.3%, underscoring the persistent challenges facing the industrial sector. Economists had widely anticipated the stagnation, reflecting subdued consumer demand and ongoing structural headwinds.
Fiscal Policy Headwinds Loom
Despite the weak July reading, the UK economy has outperformed other G7 peers year-to-date, thanks in part to resilient services growth and a post-pandemic rebound in labor participation. However, the government’s fiscal stance could soon weigh on that trajectory. Treasury Chief Rachel Reeves is expected to introduce tax increases in November’s budget to meet fiscal rules, which could further constrain consumer spending and business investment.
Paul Dales, Chief UK Economist at Capital Economics, noted that July’s stagnation reflects the lingering impact of earlier tax hikes and signals vulnerability to future fiscal tightening.
Monetary Policy: Inflation Still in Focus
The Bank of England () faces a delicate balancing act. is projected to remain elevated at 4% in September—double the 2% target—keeping policymakers wary of aggressive rate cuts. After reducing rates in August, markets largely expect the BoE to hold its benchmark rate steady at 4% in its upcoming meeting, reinforcing its “gradual and careful” stance.
Economists, including Suren Thiru of ICAEW, warn that a back-to-back cut is unlikely given the inflation backdrop, even as growth cools. This indicates that policymakers prioritize price stability over stimulating demand in the near term, particularly with supply-side inflation drivers persisting in energy and food markets.
Key Economic Metrics (July 2025)
Indicator |
Latest Reading |
Previous Reading |
Notes |
GDP Growth (MoM) |
0.0% |
+0.4% |
Flat growth vs. June’s rebound |
Industrial Production (MoM) |
-0.9% |
+0.5% |
Significant contraction |
Manufacturing Output (MoM) |
-1.3% |
+0.7% |
Sharpest decline since early 2025 |
Services Output (MoM) |
+0.2% |
+0.4% |
Still driving overall resilience |
Inflation Forecast (Sept) |
~4.0% |
4.2% |
Remains well above BoE target |
BoE Policy Rate |
4.0% |
4.25% |
Expected hold at next meeting |
Expected November Fiscal Policy |
Tax hikes |
— |
Potential drag on Q4 growth |
Broader Context: Global Divergence in Monetary Policy
The U.K.’s struggle to balance growth and inflation mirrors similar dynamics in the eurozone, where economic stagnation contrasts with persistent price pressures. However, the BoE’s cautious approach diverges from the U.S. Federal Reserve’s more aggressive tightening cycle earlier this year, suggesting monetary policy divergence may persist into 2026.
Currency markets have already priced in limited BoE action, keeping sterling stable near recent highs against the but vulnerable to strength if Fed policy remains restrictive.
Forward-Looking Scenarios
- Bullish Case: A cooling labor market and easing commodity prices could bring inflation closer to target by early 2026, enabling the BoE to deliver rate cuts without destabilizing markets. Stabilizing tax policy and infrastructure investment could support medium-term growth.
- Bearish Case: Persistent inflation, coupled with fiscal tightening, risks tipping the economy into a mild recession. Manufacturing weakness and external shocks, such as energy price spikes or geopolitical instability, could amplify downside risks.
Investor Takeaways
The UK’s flat GDP growth in July highlights a fragile economic recovery at risk of further headwinds from tax increases and stubborn inflation. While the BoE is unlikely to loosen policy aggressively in the near term, its cautious stance may stabilize financial markets by signaling commitment to price control.
For investors, this creates opportunities in:
- Defensive sectors (utilities, consumer staples) likely to weather slower growth.
- Fixed income instruments, as yields may remain attractive with rate cuts delayed.
- Currency hedging strategies to navigate GBP volatility amid global policy divergence.
Equity investors should remain selective, focusing on companies with strong pricing power and global revenue exposure, as domestic demand faces tightening fiscal and monetary conditions.