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U.K. GDP Weakens in 1Q as Govt Prepares for New Showdown With EU Over Brexit

Published 12/05/2022, 07:36
Updated 12/05/2022, 07:36
© Reuters.

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- The British economy grew less than expected in the first quarter, as the winter wave of Omicron-variant COVID-19, a skills shortage, and an intensifying cost-of-living crisis all weighed on output.

Gross domestic product grew by only 0.8% in seasonally-adjusted terms from the fourth quarter, the Office for National Statistics said on Thursday, with preliminary data suggesting that it actually declined in March by 0.1%. Analysts had expected growth of 1.0% for the quarter, and stagnation in March.

Other data for March released on Thursday showed that industrial output fell for a second straight month, by 0.2%, while the trade deficit widened to 23.9 billion pounds on the month, from 20.6 billion in February.

Construction was the only bright spot, where output rose 1.7%, its biggest gain in three months.

The slowdown may weaken the government’s hand as it prepares for another round of brinkmanship with the European Union over the terms of the Brexit deal negotiated by the two sides. The U.K. has drafted legislation that would suspend checks on all goods arriving in Northern Ireland, which remained part of the EU’s customs area under the deal. EU officials have threatened retaliation if London goes ahead with its plans.

Sterling dipped on the news before recovering most of its losses to trade at $1.2196 by 2:20 AM ET (0620 GMT). It has fallen over 3% against the dollar in the last month as the economic outlook has darkened. The Bank of England, which raised its key interest rate for the fourth time in five months last week, now expects the economy to contract toward the end of the year.

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Latest comments

Brexit was such a great success wasnt it
For once Bailey spoke truth and no one listened: higher interest rates will bring recession and that will ******inflation. Fed is stillmin coucou land with strong demand and job market.
shambolic UK government... they try to put Brexit on the agenda to shift the public's focus.
The rate increases by the Bank of England have finally showed results with the minor decline in March - we should now expect inflation to slow down from June
No big surprise with US, France, Germany, all in a technical recession as well.Not so sure on why they want to keep on banging on about NI protocol. Let’s concentrate on growth shall we instead. NI is actually growing.
I live in NI and all I see is a debt fueled system worldwide where the debt isn't being used for the benefit of everyone overall. The solution is always growth which for years has been relying on debt and low interest rates which is not sustainable and is going to eventally lead to inflation.
Useless government
Unelectable opposition
not anymore
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