With just a week to go until Britain is due to meet the legal limbo of Brexit next Friday, the country's economy is in the face of mixed signals of slowing growth and low unemployment, with crowds of enterprises in a rush to getting away and hordes of Chinese investors coming in.
Britain is also buffeted by the slowing Eurozone economy and tit-for-tat trade tensions, exacerbating the difficulties ahead.
UK economy ahead of Brexit
The world's fifth largest economy notched up
GDP growth of 1.4 percent to the tune of 2.629 trillion U.S. dollars
last year after expanding by 1.8 percent in 2017. The increment speed is
projected by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) to be dragged down further to 0.8 percent this year on account
of global headwinds and Brexit chaos.
The pound has dipped about 12 percent to the
U.S. dollar since June 2016 and over 10 percent against the euro, which
to some extent peps up exports of the country's goods and services to
those with strong currencies, according to AFP.
Despite the lowest unemployment rate of four percent
since 1975 and an annual inflation rate at a two-year low of 1.8
percent, Britain's consumer confidence has now hit rock bottom, at a
five-year low, according to Germany's largest market research institute
GfK.
According to the UK Office for National
Statistics (ONS), companies' British investments dipped 1.4 percent in
the fourth quarter of 2018 compared with the third quarter, and sluggish
growth has been posted in household spending in the last two years.
Companies press Brexit panic button
Concerns about Britain crashing out of the EU
or a no-deal Brexit has swept through the globe. Many enterprises have
announced they are leaving Britain or looking into relocating in the
event of a chaotic split that would spook financial markets and
dislocate trade flows across Europe and beyond.
The country was once seen as the "springboard
to Europe," but with the uncertainties looming over Brexit, an array of
big-name companies join the team to flee from Britain or threaten to
leave, ranging from financial magnates of Citigroup, Goldman Sach,
Barclays and Nomura Holdings to auto giants such as Honda and Nissan.
A recent report on financial markets by think
tank New Financial indicated that more than 275 financial companies are
now transferring a total of 925 billion pounds of assets and thousands
of British employees to the EU to prepare for Brexit, at the cost of
over four billion U.S. dollars.
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