Table of contents
- UK GDP fell by 2.0% in Quarter 1 2020
- Nearly all industries contributed to the fall in GDP in Quarter 1 2020
- Rolling three-month growth fell by 2.0%, the lowest rate since the three months to December 2008
- GDP fell by 5.8% in March 2020
- The services sector fell by 1.9% in Quarter 1 2020
- Production fell by 2.1% in Quarter 1 2020
- Output in the construction sector fell by 2.6% in Quarter 1 2020
- Expenditure measure
- Income measure
- Things you need to know about this release
- Quality and methodology
- Related links
1. UK GDP fell by 2.0% in Quarter 1 2020
Figure 1: GDP fell by 2.0% in Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020, signalling the first direct impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) on the economy
UK GDP growth, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2018 until Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Q1 refers to Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar), Q2 refers to Quarter 2 (Apr to June), Q3 refers to Quarter 3 (July to Sept) and Q4 refers to Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec).
- Rolling three-month estimates are calculated by comparing GDP in a three-month period with GDP in the previous three-month period. For example, GDP in January to March compared with the previous October to December.
Download this chart Figure 1: GDP fell by 2.0% in Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020, signalling the first direct impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) on the economy
Image .csv .xlsThis release captures the first direct effects of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and the government measures taken to reduce transmission of the virus. The most significant was the introduction of restrictions in movement across the UK, which began on 23 March 2020.
This bulletin provides a broad overview of the economy and the impact of the coronavirus. However, a more detailed analysis of the impact on the output of businesses has also been published today (13 May 2020).
GDP estimates for March and Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020 are subject to more uncertainty than usual as a result of the challenges we faced in collecting the data under the governments imposed public health restrictions. Given the uncertainties in estimating the labour market and government intervention to support business, the breakdown of the income approach to GDP should be treated with particular caution.
Statistician’s comment
Commenting on today’s GDP figures, Jonathan Athow, Deputy National Statistician for Economic Statistics, said:
“With the arrival of the pandemic nearly every aspect of the economy was hit in March, dragging growth to a record monthly fall.
“Services and construction saw record declines on the month with education, car sales and restaurants all falling substantially.
“Although very few industries saw growth, there were some that did including IT support and the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, soaps and cleaning products.
“The pandemic also hit trade globally, with UK imports and exports falling over the last couple of months, including a notable drop in imports from China.”
Back to table of contents2. Nearly all industries contributed to the fall in GDP in Quarter 1 2020
Figure 2: Breakdown of GDP and its sub-sectors, rolling three-month growth rates and contributions to growth, January to March 2020
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All the headline sectors provided a negative contribution to gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the three months to March 2020. The services sector fell by 1.9%, production by 2.1% and construction by 2.6%. The impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) were seen right across the economy, with nearly all sub-sectors falling in the three months to March.
Back to table of contents3. Rolling three-month growth fell by 2.0%, the lowest rate since the three months to December 2008
Figure 3: GDP fell by 2.0% in the three months to March 2020, following no growth in the three months to February
Growth, three months on previous three months, UK, February to April 2019 until January to March 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Rolling three-month estimates are calculated by comparing GDP in a three-month period with GDP in the previous three-month period. For example, GDP in January to March compared with the previous October to December.
Download this chart Figure 3: GDP fell by 2.0% in the three months to March 2020, following no growth in the three months to February
Image .csv .xlsRolling three-month growth fell by 2.0% in March 2020, following no output growth in February 2020. All the main sectors in the economy also saw a fall in the most recent period.
Rolling three-month growth is based on output gross value added (GVA). There will therefore be discrepancies in the time series with our quarterly estimates of gross domestic product (GDP), which include information on the expenditure and income approaches to measuring GDP.
Back to table of contents4. GDP fell by 5.8% in March 2020
January 2020 | February 2020 | March 2020 | Quarter 1 2020 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
GDP | 0.1% | -0.2% | -5.8% | -2.0% |
Index of Services | 0.1% | 0.0% | -6.2% | -1.9% |
Index of Production | -0.1% | -0.1% | -4.2% | -2.1% |
Manufacturing | 0.1% | 0.3% | -4.6% | -1.7% |
Construction | 0.2% | -2.1% | -5.9% | -2.6% |
Agriculture | -0.1% | -0.1% | -0.2% | -0.2% |
Download this table Table 1: Breakdown of GDP and its components’ growth rates by month
.xls .csvMonthly gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 5.8% in March 2020, the biggest monthly fall since the series began in 1997. Services and construction also saw record falls in the most recent month.
The monthly growth rate for GDP is volatile. It should therefore be used with caution and alongside other measures, such as the three-month growth rate, when looking for an indicator of the longer-term trend of the economy. However, it is useful in highlighting one-off changes that can be masked by three-month growth rates.
Back to table of contents5. The services sector fell by 1.9% in Quarter 1 2020
Figure 4: Services fell by 1.9% in the three months to March 2020, with widespread falls across the vast majority of industries
Rolling three-month on three-month index, January to March 2019 until January to March 2020, January to March 2019 = 100
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Rolling three-month estimates are calculated by comparing GDP in a three-month period with GDP in the previous three-month period. For example, GDP in January to March compared with the previous October to December.
- "All other services" accounts for 69% of services. This is made up of a large number of industries, some of which will have grown and some which will have fallen in the three months to March.
Download this chart Figure 4: Services fell by 1.9% in the three months to March 2020, with widespread falls across the vast majority of industries
Image .csv .xlsRolling three-month services growth fell by 1.9% in March 2020, following growth of 0.2% in the three months to February 2020. This was driven by falls in nearly every industry, most notably:
- education, which fell by 4.0% as a result of school closures at the end of March
- wholesale and retail trade and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, which fell by 10.7%, predominantly driven by a reduction in new car registrations
- food and beverage service activities, which fell by 7.3% as a result of the closure of bars and restaurants towards the end of March
- accommodation, which fell by 14.6% as a result of the closure of hotels and campsites in March
- travel agents, which fell by 23.6% as a result of reduced demand caused by the introduction of travel restrictions in March
Despite widespread falls, some industries saw growth, the largest of which was computer programming, consultancy and related activities, which grew by 1.4%.
Figure 5: All but one of the services sub-sectors contributed negatively to growth in March 2020
Contributions to services growth, month on previous month, UK, March 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Components contributions may not sum to total because of rounding.
Download this chart Figure 5: All but one of the services sub-sectors contributed negatively to growth in March 2020
Image .csv .xlsIn March 2020, the services sector fell by 6.2%, the largest monthly fall on record. The largest driver to this fall was wholesale, retail and motor trades followed by accommodation and food services, and education. The only positive contribution to growth came from public administration and defence, which grew marginally compared with the previous month.
Back to table of contents6. Production fell by 2.1% in Quarter 1 2020
Figure 6: Widespread shut-downs caused production to fall significantly in the three-months to March 2020
Rolling three-month on three-month index, January to March 2019 until January to March 2020, January to March 2019 = 100
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Rolling three-month estimates are calculated by comparing GDP in a three-month period with GDP in the previous three-month period. For example, GDP in January to March compared with the previous October to December.
Download this chart Figure 6: Widespread shut-downs caused production to fall significantly in the three-months to March 2020
Image .csv .xlsRolling three-month output in the production sector fell by 2.1% in March 2020, with manufacturing falling by 1.7%.
There were widespread falls across manufacturing industries with 9 out of 13 sub-sectors falling. The most notable was the manufacture of transport equipment, which fell by 9.9%. This was partially offset by an increase in the manufacture of basic pharmaceuticals, which grew by 9.2%.
Elsewhere, energy production along with mining and quarrying fell, while water supply increased. The fall in mining and quarrying was largely as a result of widespread maintenance shutdowns within oil and gas extraction.
Figure 7: Manufacture of transport equipment was the main contributor to the fall in manufacturing in March 2020
Contributions to manufacturing growth, months on previous month, UK, March 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Components contributions may not sum to total because of rounding.
Download this chart Figure 7: Manufacture of transport equipment was the main contributor to the fall in manufacturing in March 2020
Image .csv .xlsProduction fell by 4.2% in March 2020, with manufacturing falling by 4.6%. The largest cause of this decrease was manufacture of transport equipment, which fell by 20.5% following COVID-19-led shutdowns on car plants across the UK.
Back to table of contents7. Output in the construction sector fell by 2.6% in Quarter 1 2020
Figure 8: The construction sector fell by 2.6% in the three months to March 2020
Rolling three-month index, UK, January to March 2019 until January to March 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP monthly estimate
Notes:
- Rolling three-month estimates are calculated by comparing GDP in a three-month period with GDP in the previous three-month period. For example, GDP in January to March compared with the previous October to December.
Download this chart Figure 8: The construction sector fell by 2.6% in the three months to March 2020
Image .csv .xlsRolling three-month growth in the construction sector was negative 2.6% in March 2020. This was caused by private commercial work which fell 5.3%, as well as declines in private housing new work and private housing repair and maintenance (negative 4.2% and negative 7.5%, respectively).
Month-on-month, output in construction fell by a record 5.9% in March 2020, following a fall of 2.1% in the weather-impacted February 2020. This fall was driven by declines in all types of work, which, again, is the first time this has happened since monthly records began in 2010. There were record monthly declines in both repair and maintenance (-5.1%) and new work (-6.2%)
Back to table of contents8. Expenditure measure
Figure 9: Private consumption, government consumption and net trade subtracted from growth in Quarter 1 2020, with only gross capital formation contributing positively to growth
UK, Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2018 to Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020
Source: Office for National Statistics – GDP first quarterly estimate
Notes:
- Q1 refers to Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar), Q2 refers to Quarter 2 (Apr to June), Q3 refers to Quarter 3 (July to Sept) and Q4 refers to Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec).
- Chart shows contribution to real GDP quarter-on-quarter growth.
- Components contributions may not sum to total due to rounding. The statistical discrepancy is also not displayed.
- Private consumption is household final consumption expenditure and non-profit institutions serving households.
Download this chart Figure 9: Private consumption, government consumption and net trade subtracted from growth in Quarter 1 2020, with only gross capital formation contributing positively to growth
Image .csv .xlsThe expenditure approach to measuring gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 2.0% in Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020. Household consumption fell by 1.7%, the largest contraction since Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec) 2008, alongside declines in gross fixed capital formation, government consumption and trade volumes.
For more information please see the bulletin for the first quarterly estimate of GDP.
Back to table of contents9. Income measure
The income approach to measuring gross domestic product (GDP) has a relatively low data content at this early stage compared with the output and expenditure approaches, with many of the income components based on forecasts. As such, care should be taken when interpreting these. For more information please see the bulletin for the first quarterly estimate of GDP.
Back to table of contents10. Things you need to know about this release
Revisions
This release incorporates revisions to estimates for January and February 2020.
Coronavirus (COVID-19)
In response to the developing coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, we are working to ensure that we continue to publish economic statistics. For more information, please see COVID-19 and the production of statistics. In line with the current government guidelines, we are encouraging Office for National Statistics (ONS) staff to work from home and to avoid unnecessary travel and social contact. We have an established infrastructure to help mitigate these changes to ensure we continue to produce economic statistics. We will continue to review our mitigation as events unfold.
This release captures the first direct effects of the coronavirus pandemic and the government measures taken to reduce transmission of the virus. Because of the implementation of these government measures, which include restrictions in movement, we faced an increased number of challenges in producing monthly and quarterly estimates of UK gross domestic product (GDP) for Quarter 1 2020. More detailed information on the challenges and the steps taken to mitigate those can be found in Coronavirus and the effects on UK GDP. Further information on industry response rates and challenges can be found in the impact on the output of businesses.
As a result of these challenges, GDP estimates for Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2020 are subject to more uncertainty than usual.
Back to table of contents11. Quality and methodology
Quality and methodology information on strengths, limitations, appropriate uses, and how the data were created is available in the Gross domestic product (GDP) QMI.
Back to table of contents