The United Kingdom’s gross domestic product grew by 0.1% in the final quarter of 2024, according to official data, reflecting a significant slowdown compared to earlier in the year. GDP measures the total monetary value of all goods and services produced within a country over a specific period and serves as the primary indicator of economic health tracked by governments, the IMF, the World Bank, and central banks worldwide.
GDP figures are published quarterly by the UK’s Office for National Statistics. The data covers output across three main sectors: services, production, and construction. Services account for the largest share of UK economic activity, making shifts in consumer spending and business investment particularly influential on the overall number.
For the full year 2024, the UK economy grew by 0.9%. That figure places the UK among the slower-growing advanced economies in the current global cycle. By comparison, the United States recorded stronger GDP growth through much of 2024, supported by resilient consumer spending despite elevated interest rates maintained by the Federal Reserve as part of its monetary policy response to inflation.
Inflation in the UK peaked above 11% in late 2022, one of the highest rates among G7 nations. The Bank of England, the UK’s central bank, responded by raising interest rates aggressively, bringing the base rate to 5.25% by August 2023 — the highest level in 16 years. Higher borrowing costs reduced household spending power and slowed business investment, both of which feed directly into GDP calculations.
By early 2025, the Bank of England had begun cutting rates gradually as inflation moved closer to its 2% target. The rate stood at 4.5% in February 2025 after a series of reductions. The pace of those cuts remains tied to incoming inflation data and labor market conditions, with the central bank balancing the risk of reigniting price pressures against the need to support growth.
Inflation in the UK was running at 2.5% in December 2024, above the Bank of England’s target but significantly lower than the peak. Persistent services inflation, driven partly by wage growth, has kept the overall figure above target even as energy prices fell.
The UK economy does not operate in isolation. Global trade conditions, tariff policies, and the broader trajectory of the world economy all affect UK export performance and business confidence. The IMF’s January 2025 World Economic Outlook projected global GDP growth of 3.3% for 2025, unchanged from 2024, with advanced economies as a group growing more slowly than emerging markets.
Trade tensions have added uncertainty to the global outlook. New tariff measures introduced by the United States in early 2025 raised concerns among trading partners, including European economies closely linked to UK supply chains. The World Bank has flagged that fragmentation in global trade could reduce efficiency and weigh on GDP growth across multiple regions.
For the UK specifically, trade with the European Union remains central despite the structural changes that followed Brexit. Any slowdown in eurozone demand — the eurozone economy grew by approximately 0.7% in 2024 — feeds through to UK export volumes and manufacturing output.
The UK government’s Office for Budget Responsibility revised its 2025 growth forecast down to 1% in late 2024, citing weaker global demand and the lagged effects of tight monetary policy. The IMF projected UK growth at 1.6% for 2025 in its January update, a more optimistic figure, though both projections remain below the UK’s pre-2008 historical average growth rate of around 2.5% per year.
Recession, defined technically as two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, was narrowly avoided in the UK in 2024. The economy contracted by 0.1% in both the third and fourth quarters of 2023, meeting that technical definition at the time, before returning to marginal positive growth in 2024.
Business investment in the UK has remained subdued relative to peer economies. The combination of higher interest rates, uncertainty around fiscal policy, and slower global trade growth has kept capital expenditure below levels that would typically support stronger GDP expansion. The Office for National Statistics data shows that government spending provided more support to headline GDP in 2024 than private sector activity.
