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Credit CrunchYou are in: Suffolk > Credit Crunch > Credit crunch: The east's economy Credit crunch: Hitting housing market. Credit crunch: The east's economyBy Richard Bond As people are starting to feel the pinch in their pockets with mortgage rises, increasing fuel costs and food prices, 91热爆 Look East business correspondent Richard Bond explores how the credit crunch is affecting the east. The credit crunch is giving the east's economy a nasty shock, after a decade of uninterrupted growth. The sectors worst hit are those which have boomed the most in recent years. Property, retailing, aviation, financial services are at the heart of the storm. Dozens of estate agent branches have closed. It's hardly surprising though when mortgage lenders have withdrawn easy credit. In April, the Norwich And Peterborough Building Society pulled two-thirds of its mortgage range. Housing marketHouse builders have shed staff and postponed new developments. Doubt is being cast on the government's ability to deliver its promise of three million new homes for the east. Developers are having to come up with innovative ideas to shift their stock. A company in Milton Keynes is offering to pay the first 拢500 of people's mortgages every month for two years if they buy one of its properties. In consumer finance, money is much less plentiful. Northampton-based Barclaycard has cut the credit limits on a million of its customers. Retailers have been feeling the pinch. Upmarket shops selling discretionary items have reported lower sales, as have out-of-town shopping centres because motorists wishing to save on petrol are less willing to drive to them. Travel and holidaysStansted Airport has seen its passenger numbers fall for the first time in more than a decade, while Ryanair plans to ground several of its aircraft at the Essex airport this winter because of high fuel prices. Ryanair is cutting its winter flights Because fewer bankers and business leaders are flying over the pond, two of the region's transatlantic airlines have gone bust this year. Eos, which flew from Stansted, stopped flights in April, while Luton-based Silverjet collapsed in May. Neither was able to find anyone willing to refinance its operation. Fortunes in the region's tourism industry have been mixed. Camping sites and holiday parks have reported higher bookings. It seems the rising cost of air travel and the fall in the value of the pound against the euro have encouraged families to stay in the UK. However, pubs and day attractions have found it tougher because consumers appear less willing to jump in their cars for the sake of a day out - again, because of fuel costs. Manufacturers optimisticThe sectors of the economy that have been used to boom times are having a lean period. But the reverse is also true, with many manufacturers doing very well, after years in the shadows. Firms such as the offshore fabricator SLP, in Lowestoft, are not dependent on fragile consumer confidence as the expansion of renewables and orders for new gas and oil installations all over the world are keeping them busy. The region is not in recession - yet. It may escape, but it will be a close call. last updated: 22/07/2008 at 16:05 Have Your Say
While comparing prices in an organic shop and Aldi, it would appear 91热爆 Look East is giving free advertising to Aldi. What about the marvellous farm shops we have providing local produce, who badly need our support. It might mean we buy a local cabbage and forego some luxury fruit or veg. Let's support them all we can. SEE ALSOYou are in: Suffolk > Credit Crunch > Credit crunch: The east's economy From 91热爆 business news: UK in recession |
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