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UK economy grew by 0.3% in November, beating forecasts

Screenshot 2026 01 15 081450.png UK car manufacturing recovered in November

Thu, 15 Jan 2026 Source: bbc.com

The UK economy grew by a faster-than-expected 0.3% in November after car production rebounded and the services sector got a boost.

Growth was driven by an increase in industrial output, helped by the return to production at Jaguar Land Rover's facilities following the cyber-attack at the carmaker.

November's growth figure was stronger than analysts' expectations of a 0.1% increase.

The Office for National Statistics also said the economy "grew slightly" over the three months to the end of November, by 0.1%.

Manufacturing output increased in November, rising by 2.1%, thanks to a big 25.5% increase in the output of motor vehicles as JLR production continued to pick up.

With the Budget on 26 November, there was also an increase in services driven by activities such as accounting and tax consultancy.

Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said the figures showed economic activity accelerated despite uncertainty in the lead up to the Budget.

"Despite the relatively mooted consumer sentiment so far and consumer-facing services output declining in November, there are some tentative signs of a pick-up in household spending," she said.

"With the worst of the uncertainty behind businesses, we expect growth momentum to continue over the coming months."

Construction output fell by 1.3% in November, and the ONS said the sector also registered "its largest three-monthly fall in nearly three years."

Ruth Gregory, deputy chief economist at Capital Economics, said the fall in construction was probably due to "unseasonably wet weather" and was likely to rebound in December.

However, Gregory said the increase in services output did "little more than reverse the big declines in the past few months."

"So we think November's strength is more likely to be a rebound rather than a sign that the economy is fundamentally stronger than we thought," she said.

A Treasury spokesperson said the government was making the economy "work for working people" by "reversing years of underinvestment" in infrastructure as well as putting through planning reform.

The spokesperson said the government was working to get bills and inflation down, but acknowledged there was still more to do to tackle the cost of living.

Source: bbc.com