Four in five Britons believe recession is imminent – Poll

More than four in five Britons believe the UK will dip into recession next year, according to research published today.

A Censuswide poll for InvestingReviews.co.uk found that 83% anticipate a hard landing for the economy in 2023, with just 8% believing that recession can be avoided.

Public pessimism comes despite the Office for National Statistics (ONS) saying that the economy grew in the second quarter of this year, contrary to an earlier reading which said it had contracted.

Simon Jones, CEO of InvestingReviews, said: “There doesn’t seem to be too much disagreement about the direction the country is heading.

“A huge majority believe the die is cast and a recession next year is now unavoidable.”

The poll’s findings reflect widespread concern over spiking interest rates and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine which has seen further bloodshed in recent days.

According to the research, public frustration with the Bank of England (BoE) over its handling of the cost-of-living crisis is also mounting following seven successive interest rate hikes.

This is clear as over 73% of those surveyed agreed that BoE blundered on interest rates.

As well as this, accelerating prices remain a major concern with almost half (44%) believing inflation will rise to 11% or above.

37% of people said that monetary tightening had been too fast, compared with 36% who thought rate-setters had been too slow.

The survey revealed widespread public fears that inflation – currently at 9.9% – may soon climb back into the double digits.

Almost half (44%) thought that inflation would rise to 11% (the BoE’s forecasted peak) or above despite a cap on energy prices.

Jones added: “The Bank of England faces a difficult balancing act as it tries to cool inflation without tipping the country into a deep recession. 

“As our poll shows, the public is almost equally split on whether the current hiking cycle has been too fast or too slow.”

ADVERTISEMENT