Press release

16 Mar 2022

2022 should deliver a year of above-trend economic growth in the Channel Islands, ITEM Club predicts

The economies of the Channel Islands look to have enjoyed a rebound last year from the economic damage caused by COVID-19, according to the latest EY ITEM Club Winter forecast – Outlook for the Channel Islands report.

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Sophie Lihou

Manager, Financial Services Marketing and Business Development, Ernst & Young LLP

Communications professional. Loves to travel. Beach and sun worshiper.

This report was commissioned by EY to analyse how the events from the past year have, and will continue to, impact on the Channel Islands economies. The report explores the differing government responses to COVID-19 and how these impacted the economic outcomes for each respective island, the economic indicators which point towards recovery and growth, as well as the key issues facing our economies.

While the barrier to growth presented by the pandemic fades, new obstacles are emerging in the form of surging commodity prices, high inflation and rising global tensions. The islands’ economies will not escape these headwinds, notably the squeeze on households’ spending power from cost-of-living pressures. The structure of the Channel Islands’ economies and the importance of tourism in sustaining employment and local spending does leave the islands, in some respects, more vulnerable to any resurgence in COVID-19 uncertainty.

Martin Beck, Chief Economic Advisor for EY ITEM Club, explains what will be key to the Islands economic recovery and growth:

“The worst of the pandemic looks to be in the past, which should boost confidence and the willingness of consumers and businesses to spend. Other forces, particularly strong household finances, are present in the Channel Islands and should go some way to compensate for the return of high inflation. Moreover, the important role played by banking in the islands’ economies means our expectation of rising interest rates should prove a net economic positive, resulting in a faster recovery in banking profits and GDP. That said, the economic consequences of rising commodity prices and heightened geopolitical uncertainty have cast a serious cloud over the outlook and something the Channel Islands’ economies won’t be immune from.”

 
Download the full report here https://go.ey.com/34HXA4C