The UK economy has officially tipped into contraction. GDP figures released this morning show a 0.3% drop in the third quarter. The culprit? Escalating tensions in Iran. Global supply chains are seizing up. Oil prices have spiked 12% in a week. The Treasury is bracing for worse.
Sources inside Number 11 tell me the mood is grim. Jeremy Hunt’s team is already modelling a technical recession. That’s two consecutive quarters of negative growth. The fear is that this is just the beginning. Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has choked off a fifth of the world’s oil. Container shipping rates have tripled. British manufacturers are stockpiling components. It’s 1973 all over again, but with a digital twist.
The Bank of England is caught in a trap. Inflation is still above target. But raising rates now would crush what little growth remains. Threadneedle Street insiders hint at a wait-and-see approach. That might not fly with the markets. Sterling is already wobbling.
On the political front, this is a nightmare for Rishi Sunak. He promised to grow the economy. Now it’s shrinking. Labour is sharpening its knives. Starmer’s team will point to the government’s lack of a contingency plan. The Iran crisis was foreseeable. The Foreign Office was warned months ago about the risk of escalation. But No.10 was distracted by by-elections and backbench squabbles.
Cabinet divisions are already surfacing. The Business Secretary wants emergency intervention. Subsidies, wage support, the works. The Treasury is pushing back. “No handouts,” they insist. The Chancellor is privately fuming about the cost. But political pressure is building. Backbench Tories in Red Wall seats are scared. They remember 2008. They know what a recession does to their margins.
The real fear is contagion. If the Iran conflict spills into a wider regional war, the economic damage could dwarf the Covid crash. The Treasury’s worst-case scenario is a 5% GDP drop. That would obliterate Sunak’s fiscal headroom. Austerity 2.0 would be unavoidable.
For now, the official line is calm. The Chancellor will issue a statement this afternoon. Expect platitudes about “resilience” and “long-term fundamentals.” But the smoke-filled rooms in Whitehall are buzzing with darker talk. This is a make-or-break moment for the government. And the omens are grim.










