Scottish business activity falls for 20 months in a row – Daily Business

2026-06-11 16:35

Judith CruickshankJudith Cruickshank
Judith Cruickshank: falling orders

Business activity in Scotland’s private sector has fallen for 20 consecutive months with the pace of contraction at its fastest since January 2023.

Of the 12 monitored UK regions and nations, only Northern Ireland recorded a steeper fall in new orders than that seen in Scotland.

The headline Royal Bank of Scotland Business Activity Index – which measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of Scotland’s manufacturing and service sectors – edged down to 47.1 in May, from 48 in April. Activity also fell across the UK as a whole, to 49.7.

Commenting on the Tracker’s findings, Judith Cruickshank, RBS Scotland board chair, said: “Scottish firms were noticeably less optimistic about bouncing back in the near future, with only those in Northern Ireland seeing new orders falling faster and having lower growth expectations in the next 12 months.

“Furthermore, the focus of this month’s report on the transport and communications sector shows the impact of high fuel prices that will be an even greater drag on businesses north of the Border, who have to move goods over longer distances.”

Despite the current muted demand conditions, private sector firms across Scotland signalled greater confidence regarding future output levels in May. Companies that were optimistic linked this to new project pipelines and forecasts of improved demand conditions.

While the degree of optimism ticked up for the first time in three months, it remained below both the survey’s long-run average and the UK-wide trend.

Private sector employment across Scotland fell for a second month running in May. The rate at which jobs were cut was weaker than that seen across the UK as a whole. Survey respondents often linked the fall to rising costs, and was often achieved through the non-replacement of voluntary leavers.

Excluding marginal rises in the South East and Northern Ireland, all UK regions and nations monitored by the survey registered a decline in headcounts during the latest survey period.

Despite the sustained fall in employment, lower new orders meant that firms were able to make further inroads into outstanding business. The rate of backlog depletion quickened since April and was sharp overall. Backlogs have now fallen on a monthly basis since last August.

Across the UK as a whole, unfinished workloads continued to decline but at a slower pace than that seen in Scotland.

While the rate of cost inflation eased for the first time in three months across Scotland’s private sector in May, the respective seasonally adjusted index still signalled a substantial rise in cost burdens. In fact, costs rose at the second-sharpest rate in three-and-a-half years.

Survey respondents linked higher prices to greater energy, raw material and transport costs amid the war in the Middle East.

In line with the trend seen for costs, private sector firms across Scotland raised their prices at a slower pace during May. Nevertheless, the rate of price inflation remained close to April’s 39-month high and marked overall. Companies often noted passing higher costs on to customers.

That said, Scotland recorded the slowest rates of both of cost and price inflation among the 12 UK nations and regions monitored by the survey.

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