×

UK businesses stay downbeat about economy, surveys show

By Thomson Reuters May 31, 2026 | 6:04 PM

LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) – British businesses remain downbeat about the economic outlook for the months to come, according to a survey from ​the Confederation of British Industry, although a ‌separate Institute of Directors survey showed smaller firms were less negative.

“Activity continues to be buffeted by weak household spending and clients’ reluctance to commit to big expenditure,” CBI ‌Deputy ​Chief Economist Alpesh Paleja said. “Ongoing ⁠tensions in the Middle ⁠East are adding another layer of pressure, with firms increasingly alert to the risk of further cost increases.”

Following are details from the reports and ​other recent data:

• The output expectations balance for CBI members for the next three months ⁠edged up to -24 in May ⁠from -25 in April but was well ​below February’s 15-month high of -13, before the Iran war

• ​The output balance for the three months to ‌May fell to -31 from -24 in April, above March’s 4-month low of -35

• Selling price expectations remained elevated but fell from April’s three-year high

• The IoD’s ⁠economic confidence index rose to -53 in May from -64 in April, having touched its lowest in March since the series ⁠began in ‌2016

• The CBI data is based ⁠on 659 responses between April 27 ​and May ‌13 to its surveys of manufacturers, ​retailers and ⁠wholesalers, and consumer- and business services firms

• The IoD data is based on 615 responses between May 15 and May 27, almost half of which employed less than 10 people

(Reporting by David MillikenEditing by ​William Schomberg)