UK's Two-Speed Crisis: Record Debt Surge As Investment Collapses
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Britain faces a split economy, according to new Bank of England data released Monday. People across the country borrow more than ever, while the engines that drive real growth keep stalling.
In July, UK households took on £1.6 billion in new debt-enough to set the pace for another yearly surge in credit card and personal loan borrowing. That means more families are relying on loans to cover everyday costs like food and energy.
At the same time, the housing market struggles to move forward. Lenders approved 65,350 mortgages in July, the most since January, but actual mortgage lending dropped from £5.4 billion to £4.5 billion.
The difference shows many buyers change their minds or cannot afford to go through with a purchase, even after getting approved. Nationwide says average UK house prices fell 0.1% in August.
Typical buyers use 35% of their take-home pay to cover their mortgages-far above the historic average of 30%. That makes buying a home harder, even as more applications get a green light.
Manufacturing adds to the worries. August marked the eleventh month in a row that UK factories shrank, with the manufacturing index falling to 47.0. Any number under 50 means the sector is shrinking.
This is not just a blip. Factories are cutting jobs, orders are dropping, and rising business costs-from wages to insurance-are making industry's struggles worse.
Even with rising debt and falling home prices, the Bank of England 's moves to ease the pain may be running out of steam. Money supply growth has nearly stalled at just 0.1% for July.
Mortgage rates have dropped for five months in a row but still sit at more than three times pre-pandemic lows, making it tough for new buyers. Companies also seem to sense trouble ahead.
Big business borrowing jumped to 8% above last year's levels, and small firms also took out more loans. But investment is cooling elsewhere, especially in factories and production.
Meanwhile, millions of Britons feel the pinch. Energy debt is up, food and utility bills are eating up more budgets, and the number of families waiting for affordable housing keeps growing.
This“two-speed” crisis leaves Britain divided. One group, with steady jobs and assets, can still navigate the downturn. A growing number, though, are caught in a cycle of borrowing to make ends meet.
That deep divide signals Britain's growth risks falling even further behind unless policies change fast.
In July, UK households took on £1.6 billion in new debt-enough to set the pace for another yearly surge in credit card and personal loan borrowing. That means more families are relying on loans to cover everyday costs like food and energy.
At the same time, the housing market struggles to move forward. Lenders approved 65,350 mortgages in July, the most since January, but actual mortgage lending dropped from £5.4 billion to £4.5 billion.
The difference shows many buyers change their minds or cannot afford to go through with a purchase, even after getting approved. Nationwide says average UK house prices fell 0.1% in August.
Typical buyers use 35% of their take-home pay to cover their mortgages-far above the historic average of 30%. That makes buying a home harder, even as more applications get a green light.
Manufacturing adds to the worries. August marked the eleventh month in a row that UK factories shrank, with the manufacturing index falling to 47.0. Any number under 50 means the sector is shrinking.
This is not just a blip. Factories are cutting jobs, orders are dropping, and rising business costs-from wages to insurance-are making industry's struggles worse.
Even with rising debt and falling home prices, the Bank of England 's moves to ease the pain may be running out of steam. Money supply growth has nearly stalled at just 0.1% for July.
Mortgage rates have dropped for five months in a row but still sit at more than three times pre-pandemic lows, making it tough for new buyers. Companies also seem to sense trouble ahead.
Big business borrowing jumped to 8% above last year's levels, and small firms also took out more loans. But investment is cooling elsewhere, especially in factories and production.
Meanwhile, millions of Britons feel the pinch. Energy debt is up, food and utility bills are eating up more budgets, and the number of families waiting for affordable housing keeps growing.
This“two-speed” crisis leaves Britain divided. One group, with steady jobs and assets, can still navigate the downturn. A growing number, though, are caught in a cycle of borrowing to make ends meet.
That deep divide signals Britain's growth risks falling even further behind unless policies change fast.

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