Fly the flag. The headlines will be about the solid milestone. The UK finally replanted its flag on its 2008 GDP growth peak, three years after Germany and the United States reclaimed theirs and after a mere five years of ultra-low interest rates. But the landscape - the details of the second-quarter GDP - has its uncomfortably rocky side.
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee will see some grounds for concern. The 0.8 per cent growth from the first quarter was generated almost entirely by the dominant services sector, which sprinted up by one per cent. The rate of growth of industrial production slipped from 0.7 per cent in the first quarter to 0.4 percent - equivalent to a meagre annualised rate of just 1.6 percent. Construction output contracted by 0.5 per cent, bad news in a country needing houses.
The UK's ascent, as in the past, is a straggling one, with services showing signs of leaving industry and manufacturing lagging behind. The UK's close-to-record external current account deficit of over four per cent of GDP is more evidence of that. Weak international competitiveness still looks like a big British growth-inhibiting problem, not helped by the fast recent rise in the pound.
More From This Section
Services might keep the UK climbing. But here, too, there are dangers. With wages up only an annual 0.3 per cent in the three months to May, Britons are still not able to spend freely, even if more of them have jobs. Some MPC members have recently been edging closer to endorsing an increase in rates soon. But the committee will watch closely for further signs of weakness in industry and wages. The pound may ease back from its $1.70 heights. The British economy is back to its peak. Storming on beyond it will get harder.