UK GDP shrinks 2.9% amid COVID lockdown; Brexit cuts exports

The Office for National Statistics said the drop in GDP was fueled by declines in retail trade and education as efforts to slow COVID-19 spread shut nonessential shops and schools across the UK

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The British economy shrank 2.9 per cent in January as the nation was hit by a new round of coronavirus restrictions and Brexit slashed exports to the European Union.

The Office for National Statistics said on Friday that the drop in gross domestic product was fueled by declines in retail trade and education as efforts to slow the spread of COVID-19 shut nonessential shops and schools across the U.K. Britain's economy is about 9 per cent smaller than it was before the coronavirus pandemic began in February 2020, the ONS said.

Manufacturing declined for the first time since April, driven by a drop in exports as the nation felt the full effects of its departure from the EU for the first time after transitional arrangements ended December 31, the ONS said.

Exports of goods to the EU plunged almost 41 per cent in January, while imports from the bloc dropped 28.8 per cent, the ONS reported.

Britain's decision to leave the EU ended more than 40 years of free trade with the 27-nation bloc and its 450 million people.

Shipments between Britain and the EU are now subject to tariffs, border checks and increased paperwork that have curtailed trade.

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