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UK economy grows 0.3% in November as services rebound.
Summary
The Office for National Statistics reported GDP rose 0.3% in November, led by a services rebound and stronger manufacturing output, and it revised September to show 0.1% growth.
Content
The Office for National Statistics said the UK economy expanded by 0.3% in November, reversing a 0.1% fall in October and marking only the second month of expansion in the second half of 2025. The ONS also revised September to show 0.1% growth rather than a contraction. Growth in November was driven primarily by services, while manufacturing and industrial output also contributed. Officials and analysts described the data as easing immediate concerns about a weak year end.
Key figures and developments:
- GDP rose 0.3% in November, above the 0.1% increase forecast in a Reuters poll.
- The ONS revised September to show 0.1% growth instead of an earlier estimate of contraction.
- Services expanded by 0.3% in November; manufacturing output rose 2.1%, with industrial production accounting for about half of the overall GDP increase.
- ONS director Liz McKeown said industry had largely recovered, noting a rebound in production at Jaguar Land Rover after an autumn cyberattack.
- On a three-month basis to November the economy grew 0.1%, beating expectations of a 0.2% contraction, while construction recorded its largest three-month fall since March 2023.
Summary:
November's data ease some short-term concerns about a sharp downturn but underline a fragile and uneven recovery. Policymakers and markets will continue to assess how recent fiscal measures and global uncertainties affect growth. Undetermined at this time.
