Latest News Wed, Aug 27, 2025 10:23 AM
Independent economic forecasts published by HM Treasury in August show a slightly firmer near-term growth picture, but reinforce the subdued outlook for construction activity over the coming year.
The average of independent forecasts points to UK GDP growth of just 1.2% in 2025, moderating to 1.1% in 2026.
This is a slight improvement on the 1.1% and 1.0% average forecasts published for 2025 and 2026 respectively last month. By comparison, GDP averaged closer to 2% growth through most of the 2010s. Since the pandemic, growth has settled at closer to 1% per year, reflecting the UK’s weaker post-COVID recovery.
The latest ONS estimates show GDP grew by 0.4% in June 2025, following a fall of 0.1% in May 2025 and a fall of 0.1% in April 2025. Within that, construction output grew by 0.3% in June 2025, following a fall of 0.5% in May 2025 and growth of 0.9% in April 2025.
Dr David Crosthwaite, chief economist at BCIS, said: “The latest forecasts are a clear reminder that we remain in a low-growth environment and construction cannot rely on growth in the wider economy to generate demand in the way it did through much of the last decade. That has big implications for how firms plan pipeline, capacity and investment decisions.”
A flat economic backdrop means housebuilders, developers and clients are unlikely to ramp up investment quickly. For construction firms, this suggests any rebound in workload will be gradual and could be uneven.
Forecasts suggest CPI inflation will average 3.4% in 4Q2025, compared with 4Q2024, easing to 2.3% throughout 2026.
While the 2026 outlook is unchanged since April, expectations for 4Q2025 have increased slightly from 3.3% last month.
Dr Crosthwaite added: “Inflation returning closer to the Bank of England’s target will help when it materialises, but the persistence of price rises well above 2% means cost pressures remain. For construction, this implies materials and labour costs are likely to continue rising in real terms, tender price inflation may prove sticky as contractors price in uncertainty, and clients face continued tension between budgets and delivery costs, particularly on long-duration projects.”
He also warned that tight financing conditions could mean developers hold back on speculative projects.
“Stagnant GDP growth limits fiscal headroom, raising questions over how the government funds infrastructure ambitions,” he said. “All eyes now turn to the Autumn Budget. The Chancellor’s choices could make the difference between stalled momentum and renewed confidence for construction.”
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