The UK economy has contracted sharply in the third quarter, official figures confirmed today, as the escalating conflict in Iran drives up energy costs and disrupts supply chains. GDP fell by 0.4% between July and September, worse than the 0.2% decline forecast by most economists. The news will heap pressure on the Chancellor ahead of next month’s Autumn Statement, with unions warning that working families are being hit hardest by the fallout from a war that feels a world away but hits close to home.
For many households, the contraction is not an abstract statistic. It is the rising price of petrol at the forecourt, the jump in electricity bills, and the squeeze on wages that have failed to keep pace with inflation. The Retail Price Index, a measure that tracks the cost of living, rose to 4.8% in September, driven by a 12% spike in fuel costs. In the North West, where I live and report, factory orders have slumped, and small business owners are telling me they are cutting back on staff hours just to stay afloat.
The Office for National Statistics cited weakness in manufacturing and construction as the main drags on the economy, with exports hit by slowing global demand. But the elephant in the room is the war. Iran’s recent strikes on key oil infrastructure have sent crude prices to $98 a barrel, and analysts predict they could hit $120 if the conflict widens. The Bank of England now faces a miserable choice: raise interest rates further to tame inflation, risking deeper recession, or hold steady and watch prices erode household budgets.
Unite union general secretary Sharon Graham was blunt: “Workers didn’t cause this war, but they’re paying for it with higher bills and frozen wages. The Chancellor must step in with emergency support for families and a windfall tax on oil giants who are profiting from this crisis.” The call echoes the growing pressure on the government to revive the energy profits levy, which was watered down earlier this year.
Regional inequality is already worsening. In the South East, the services sector has held up relatively well, with firms in finance and tech weathering the storm. But in the Midlands and the North, where manufacturing forms the backbone of the economy, the pain is acute. The North West saw a 1.2% drop in industrial output, and in towns like Burnley and Oldham, job centres are reporting a surge in inquiries from workers in the supply chain and logistics sectors.
Downing Street insisted today that the government’s “long-term plan to grow the economy is working” but offered no new measures to cushion the blow. Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves hit back, accusing the Tories of “complacency in the face of a cost-of-living crisis that is now a recession”. She demanded a freeze on energy price caps and a boost to the National Minimum Wage to £15 an hour.
The war in Iran is now in its sixth month, and there is no end in sight. For every escalation in the Gulf, the ripple effect is felt on kitchen tables across Britain. As one factory worker in Rotherham told me this morning: “We’re not the ones dropping bombs, but we’re the ones picking up the bill.” The question is whether Westminster will listen before the bills become unpayable.








