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		Brexit hazard warning lights: UK economy contracts for first time since 
		2012
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		 [August 09, 2019] 
		By Andy Bruce and David Milliken 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The British economy 
		shrank unexpectedly for the first time since 2012 in the second quarter, 
		dragged down by a slump in manufacturing just as Prime Minister Boris 
		Johnson prepares to leave the European Union with or without a divorce 
		deal.
 
 In the most startling economic warning sign since the 2016 Brexit 
		referendum, gross domestic product fell at a quarterly rate of 0.2% in 
		the three months to June, below all forecasts in a Reuters poll that had 
		pointed to a flat reading.
 
 Sterling fell to the day's low of $1.2088 after the GDP data was 
		published, down 0.4% on the day, before recovering slightly. Against the 
		euro, the pound also fell and was last down 0.3%, not far from a 
		two-year low.
 
 Year-on-year economic growth slid to 1.2% from 1.8% in the first 
		quarter, Britain's Office for National Statistics said, its weakest 
		since the start of 2018. Annual growth in June alone was the weakest 
		since August 2013 at 1.0%.
 
		
		 
		
 "The economy is stalling," PwC senior economist Mike Jakeman said. He 
		said the Brexit crisis and the uncertain global outlook left Britain's 
		economy on a "knife-edge" for the third quarter.
 
 Many car factories ramped up manufacturing at the start of the year and 
		brought forward production breaks to prepare for Britain's original 
		Brexit date of March 29, but the divorce was delayed by then Prime 
		Minister Theresa May.
 
 "Manufacturing output fell back after a strong start to the year, with 
		production brought forward ahead of the UK's original departure date 
		from the EU," ONS statistician Rob Kent Smith said.
 
 HAZARD WARNING
 
 On winning the top job last month, Johnson set up a showdown with the EU 
		by vowing to negotiate a new divorce deal and threatening that, if the 
		bloc refused, he would take Britain out on Oct. 31 without a deal.
 
 But the economic hazard warning lights are flashing just as the trade 
		battle between the United States and China unsettles the world economy.
 
 "This is a challenging period across the global economy, with growth 
		slowing in many countries," finance minister Sajid Javid said.
 
		"But the fundamentals of the British economy are strong – wages are 
		growing, employment is at a record high and we’re forecast to grow 
		faster than Germany, Italy and Japan this year."
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			A pedestrian shelters under a Union Flag umbrella in front of the 
			Bank of England, in London, Britain August 16, 2018. REUTERS/ Hannah 
			McKay/File Photo 
            
 
            Many investors say a no-deal Brexit would send shock waves through 
			the world economy, tip Britain into a recession, roil financial 
			markets and weaken London's position as the pre-eminent 
			international financial center.
 The Bank of England last week predicted that growth will only stage 
			a limited pick-up to a quarterly rate of 0.3% during the current 
			quarter and that growth for the year as a whole will drop to 1.3%.
 
 June manufacturing data was also unexpectedly poor and output for 
			the quarter contracted at the fastest rate since early 2009, when 
			Britain was mired in recession.
 
 Private-sector business surveys have shown the manufacturing and 
			construction sectors both contracted in July, while the larger 
			services sector eked out only modest growth.
 
 Britain's economy has slowed since June 2016's vote to leave the EU, 
			with annual growth rates dropping from more than 2% before the 
			referendum to expand by 1.4% last year.
 
 Ever since the 2016 EU referendum, the pound has gyrated to the 
			rhetoric of the Brexit divorce: after the result was announced, it 
			had the biggest one-day fall since the era of free-floating exchange 
			rates was introduced in the early 1970s.
 
 The finance minister-in-waiting for the opposition Labour Party, 
			John McDonnell, said: "The Tories’ Brexit bungling, including Boris 
			Johnson now taking us towards no-deal, is breaking the economy."
 
 
             
			"It’s time for an end to this incompetence from successive 
			Conservative governments – we need a general election and a Labour 
			government to turn this country around."
 
 (Additional reporting by Olga Cotaga; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; 
			Editing by Janet Lawrence)
 
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