
UK economic growth downgraded due to tariffs and cost hikes
Rising costs are set to cause 'weak' business investment and weigh on the Government's ambitions to accelerate growth in the UK economy, the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) said.
The influential trade body's latest economic forecast indicated that the UK economy is on track to grow by 1.2% this year. It had previously predicted a rise of 1.6%.
It also downgraded its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.5% to 1% for the year.
The CBI highlighted that the UK has seen strong growth over the start of the year, rising by 0.7% in the first three months of 2025.
But it suggested underlying activity 'remains sluggish' due to persistently weak demand and gloomy sentiment among businesses.
It added that higher employment costs linked to the autumn budget, including rises to national insurance contributions and the increased national minimum wage, have impacted firms.
It said this has fed into higher pricing and reduced capital expenditure and hiring among many firms.
Meanwhile, higher US tariffs from President Trump's administration have also created headwinds for exports to the US and hindered investment from multinational companies in the UK.
It comes after Donald Trump and the Prime Minister finalised a US-UK deal intended to slash trade barriers on goods from both countries while at the G7 summit in Canada earlier this week.
Louise Hellem, chief economist at the CBI, said: 'Our latest economic forecast underlines the challenges facing businesses and the wider economy as they're buffeted by domestic and global headwinds.
'The unpredictable global outlook combined with rising employment costs, gloomy business sentiment, and subdued investment intentions means it's more important than ever that government pulls all the levers it can to set the UK on a path to sustainable growth.
'With GDP (gross domestic product) set to remain modest in 2026, there is an important opportunity for the government to fire up the growth agenda in the forthcoming Industrial Strategy.
'With the cumulative burden of increased costs being felt by firms across the economy, it is vital the Industrial Strategy helps drive a thriving environment for all businesses.'
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The Guardian
37 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Wednesday briefing: How Trump's unpredictability is shaping the Middle East crisis
Good morning. In Alberta, Canada yesterday, leaders of six of the G7 countries set out their stalls on the conflict between Iran and Israel. Keir Starmer insisted that de-escalation was still the plan; Emmanuel Macron said that 'the biggest mistake that can be made today is to try to change the regime in Iran by military means'. But more than 3,000km away in Washington DC, the G7 leader who matters most was charting his own course – and bringing the US closer to entering the war. Within 24 hours Donald Trump shifted from promises that a deal could be done to demands for Tehran's 'unconditional surrender'. To his supporters this was a genius strategic manoeuvre and all part of the plan; to residents of the Iranian capital it is a much more ominous shift. The thousands who streamed from the city were not only responding to his Truth Social post calling for an immediate evacuation – but they may consider that Trump's past assertions that he wants to keep the US out of any conflict now look extremely unreliable. Last night, following a situation room briefing with his national security team, he was said to be weighing his options. A senior Israeli official told CNN: 'We are waiting for the decision of the president.' It is still unclear whether any strategy underpins Trump's public interventions – or if he has simply been shifting with the tides. Today's newsletter, with the Guardian's Andrew Roth in Washington DC, examines the available clues. Here are the headlines. Abortion rights | British MPs have voted to decriminalise abortion, marking the biggest step forward in reproductive rights in almost 60 years. 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In Alberta on Monday, he had suggested that a nuclear deal with Tehran remained 'achievable'; on the overnight flight back to DC, he said he was 'not too much in the mood to negotiate'; when he landed, he told reporters that he was 'not looking for a ceasefire', but a 'complete give-up' by Iran. Meanwhile, he posted on social media that 'IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON' and that 'everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' Later yesterday, he demanded Iran's 'unconditional surrender' and mused on how easy it would be to kill the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. 'It has shifted in the last day in a very significant way,' Andrew Roth said. Meanwhile, as Dan Sabbagh explains in this analysis piece, the US has stepped up its military presence in the region. 'The rhetoric has risen exponentially, and the pieces to do it are there,' Andrew said. 'We don't know if that's a pressure tactic or a statement of intent, but either way it makes US involvement more likely.' What happened at the G7? The Alberta summit was meant to be an opportunity for the group of wealthy nations to reach useful agreements on major international issues: Ukraine, Gaza and Trump's tariffs were all on the table. But even before Trump's early exit, that agenda was torpedoed by Israel's new attack on Iran. Trump co-signed a brief statement before his departure calling for a 'de-escalation of hostilities in the Middle East, including a ceasefire in Gaza', and asserting that 'Iran can never have a nuclear weapon'. 'There's nothing the president said that suggests that he's about to get involved in this conflict,' Keir Starmer said. 'On the contrary, the G7 statement was about de-escalation.' That analysis would appear to be based on a touching faith in Trump's commitment to international diplomatic norms rather than abiding by whatever he's said last. What do we know about what Trump wants? Trump is reportedly obsessed with winning the Nobel peace prize. His consistent message to voters during the 2024 election campaign was that a vote for him was a vote to end foreign wars – and many took him at his word. As the news of Israel's strikes on Iran broke last week, Trump's secretary of state, Marco Rubio, emphasised that the US was 'not involved in strikes against Iran'; but Trump himself declined to comment on whether the US participated, and said that the White House had been fully apprised of Benjamin Netanyahu's plans. Israeli officials have briefed the media that public statements by the US and Israel were 'strategically coordinated to lull Tehran into a false sense of security' – but that should be treated with scepticism, since it has not been corroborated by reporters in Washington. In any case, the arc of Trump's comments in recent days has been to imply closer cooperation with Israel as Iran has appeared weakened. 'His shift towards Israel reflects the facts on the ground,' Andrew said. 'The most important thing for Trump is always to come out with a win: if he tries to restrain Israel and fails, he looks weaker than if he endorses an option he was against a month ago.' But with Iran so far avoiding any provocative strike on US interests in the region, it isn't clear what would prompt him to cross the line into direct military involvement. The simplest path might be to continue to use militaristic rhetoric in support of Israel's operation, but refrain from ordering US forces to attack Tehran. Israel would dearly love to have the US as a full ally in the conflict, since it is unable to penetrate Iran's most deeply buried nuclear facilities without US bunker-busting bombs. And with reports that Trump has encouraged new talks between his Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and his Iranian counterparts, it is also possible that Trump will present Tehran with an ultimatum: commit to ending all nuclear enrichment in Iran, or face US bombing. 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Telegraph
42 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Bradford grooming cover-up left 8,000 children at risk of abuse, say campaigners
A cover-up of grooming gangs put up to 8,000 children at risk in Bradford, campaigners have claimed. Baroness Casey, whose damning audit of grooming cases was published on Monday, said she would be 'surprised' if Bradford was not one of the first areas to be part of a national inquiry into local obstruction and failings that have denied victims justice. A dossier, drawn up by a leading child abuse lawyer and MP, claims that at least 7,975 children in Bradford were at risk of sexual exploitation between 1996 and 2025, putting it on a par with similar scandals in Rochdale, Rotherham and Oldham. It outlines years of alleged systematic failures by Bradford council and partner agencies to protect vulnerable children from Asian grooming gangs operating in the city. It also contains disturbing first-hand accounts from survivors, police records and court proceedings. In the dossier, women who were victims of Asian grooming gangs in the city have named more than 60 other girls who were also abused by them. More than 70 men have been convicted or are being prosecuted for child sexual exploitation, rape or abuse. Bradford council has, until now, resisted demands from victims and campaigners for a full local inquiry into the scandal, arguing that it has already conducted serious case reviews. David Greenwood, the lawyer who compiled the dossier and played a key role in exposing abuse in Rotherham, said: 'I believe Bradford council is obstructing an independent insight into the scale and nature of sexual offending against children in what is termed grooming gang abuse. 'The council repeatedly quotes small-scale isolated case reviews as support for its view that a deeper inquiry is not required. Its arguments are disingenuous and contrary to the evidence.' Robbie Moore, the Tory MP for Bradford and a member of the home affairs select committee, said victims were frustrated that councils like the one in his city were using serious case reviews as an excuse for claiming that there was 'nothing more to see here'. He said: 'There is an overwhelming case for a full inquiry across the Bradford district, yet we have shockingly never had one. 'If Bradford's political leadership will not act, then the Government must.' Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, confirmed on Monday that the Government would back Baroness Casey's proposals for a national inquiry, where an independent commission will identify areas for local investigations with powers to compel witnesses to attend. It will focus on areas where there have been 'failures or obstruction by statutory services' to block inquiries into child sex grooming gangs. Speaking at the home affairs committee, Baroness Casey said: 'I would say if you were Bradford, if you were anywhere, in my report that we published yesterday, if you're any of the areas that are visible and identifiable, just be ready and be open to the fact that you may be the subject of one of the national inquiries. 'I'd be surprised if some of the areas, including Bradford, would not be subject to be part of the national inquiry. And it's absolutely right that I think MPs, victims, other people, are able to say, we want this to happen here.' Among those calling for an inquiry in Bradford is Fiona Goddard who was abused and exploited by an Asian grooming gang when she was living in a children's home in Bradford from the age of 14. Her groomers plied her with drugs and gifts. A court heard that she was 'in effect used as a prostitute' by another of her abusers. She has previously recounted how she was driven to suicidal thoughts and self-harm as a teenager. In February 2019, nine men were convicted of 22 offences against Ms Goddard and jailed. On Tuesday, appearing alongside Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, at a press conference on grooming gangs, she said: 'I fully believe that Bradford needs to be part of that, because the figures that you have seen in places in their previous inquiries are completely outnumbered by the scale of it in Bradford, and it would be so important to look at a place with such levels to be able to gain inside knowledge.' Ms Goddard has provided names of 14 other girls groomed by gang members. Another woman has named 61 girls who were victims. Since 2015, some 37 people have been convicted of child abuse or sexual exploitation, with a similar number on trial or on bail. Baroness Casey urged the Government not to drag its feet. She suggested it was 'not unreasonable' to expect ministers to adopt her 12 key recommendations, which include setting up a national inquiry, within six months.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Why UK's economic growth has been downgraded
The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has downgraded the UK 's economic growth forecast due to rising costs and weak business investment, impacting the government 's growth ambitions. The CBI now projects the UK economy to grow by 1.2 per cent this year, down from its previous forecast of 1.6 per cent, and has also lowered the 2026 growth forecast from 1.5 per cent to 1 per cent Higher employment costs, stemming from the autumn budget's increases to national insurance contributions and the national minimum wage, have led to higher pricing and reduced capital expenditure and hiring among firms, according to the CBI. Shadow chancellor Mel Stride criticised Labour 's policies, claiming that higher employment costs are killing growth. The CBI's chief economist, Louise Hellem, emphasised the need for the government to use its industrial strategy to drive a thriving environment for businesses, given the challenges posed by domestic and global headwinds.