“Rising costs will see businesses and consumers trying to save money. For employers, this could mean forgoing pay rises, leaving workers with lower real-terms paycheques to cover spiralling energy bills and inflated grocery prices.”
A recession is two quarters (six months in total) of negative GDP growth. We last saw this happen at the start of the pandemic, when the UK experienced a six-month recession during the first half of 2020
https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/what-would-a-recession-mean-for-your-money-aRril9c11zDK
“Rising costs will see businesses and consumers trying to save money. For employers, this could mean forgoing pay rises, leaving workers with lower real-terms paycheques to cover spiralling energy bills and inflated grocery prices.”
Did you even read your link
Yes, and my point is that the growth being reported isn’t representative of reality.
I don’t understand what you mean
Economic statistics are literally representative of reality.