The UK economy is reflecting clear signs of slowing, with growing pressure on both importers and exporters. This is amid supply chain disruption and rising energy costs, which are beginning to feed through.
Headline indicators suggest marginal economic growth. These underlying conditions point towards a more fragile environment. This shifts the focus towards control, besides adaptability. It moves with planning, flexible routing, & improved visibility. These become key to sustaining performance.
Demand moderates but exists, supported by structural activity
The latest PMI data is still expanding. This is with the composite index at 51.0. It marks 11 consecutive growth months. The pace has, however, slowed. Business confidence has likewise eased to a 9-month low.
The UK’s GDP was flat in January ’26, depicting a 3-month growth of 0.2%. It reflects a slowdown rather than a contraction. More recent data suggests that good sectors are losing momentum. Activity remains in expansion territory.
Manufacturing output during March ’26 edged close to stagnation (50.1). This was whilst overall activity continues to expand. It marks an extended growth period. Patterns in demand seem to be becoming more selective. Some buyers delay orders due to cost pressures. Others are sustaining or even accelerating purchasing to secure supply.

Currently, export demand remains mixed. Some manufacturers reported modest increases in orders from overseas. This was supported partly by customers advancing purchases. Furthermore,so, others developed inventories to mitigate future disruption.
These reflect a market that is not weakening uniformly. Instead, they point towards becoming more dynamic. Also, tends to reflect pockets of resilience alongside more cautious spending.
Input costs surge sharply, reinforcing the need for supply chain control
Cost pressures are accelerating across goods sectors. This is driven by higher fuel costs. Also, transportation and energy-intensive inputs.
Manufacturing input costs recorded their sharpest surge in over 3 decades. That is, with around 47% of firms reporting increasing costs. This is feeding through into pricing for output.



