The final estimated UK GDP in volume terms increased by 0.3% on the previous quarter, the same as it was estimated in the previous estimate in May. GDP fell in volume by a record 4.9% during 2009. The household saving ratio was 6.9% and real household disposable income rose by 0.4% following a fall of 1% in the previous quarter.
GDP output by category shows that in agriculture, forestry and fisheries output fell by 2.2%. The production industries increased output by 1% over the quarter but output fell by 10.2% over 2009. Mining and quarrying output fell by 0.5% but manufacturing output rose by 1.4%. Electricity, gas and water utilities output increased by 0.4% but construction decreased by 1.6%. Services increased output by 0.3% but output in 2009 fell by 3.3% on 2008 while distribution, hotels and restaurants fell in all sub-categories and by 0.7% overall. Transport, storage and communication increased output by 0.2% due to weaker growth in land transport and post and telecommunications. Business services and finance output increased by 1% due to stronger growth in banking, renting and real estate. Government and other services reported an unchanged level of growth with output in health and social care increasing by 0.5% and other services increasing by 0.2%. Education decreased by 0.6% and public administration and defence output fell by 0.3%.
GDP can also be analysed using expenditure categories. Gross domestic expenditure incrrased by 1.2%. Household final consumption expenditure fell by 0.1% and so the volume of spending in 0.2% lower than Q1 2009. Government final consumption expenditure increased by 1.5% from 0.1% in the previous quarter. Gross fixed capital formation increased by 4.4% compared with a fall of 1.7% in the previous quarter. The increase was mainly due to an increase of 7.8% in business investment which is still 7.7% lower than Q1 2009. General government investment increased by 6.5%. In 2009 gross fixed capital formation decreased by 15% compared with 5% a year earlier. Inventories decreased by £2.2bn. The trade deficit increased to £10.4bn.
The GDP implied deflator at market prices was 2.9% above the same quarter 2009 and increased by 1.7% over the quarter 2010. GDP at market prices increased by 2.1% over the quarter but fell by 3.7% in 2009.
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