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UK PM to start Brexit talks on weak economic footing

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LONDON: UK Prime Minister Theresa May will start Brexit talks with a slowing economy.

Growth was just 0.2% in the first quarter, the weakest in a year, and less than half the pace recorded in the eurozone, the Office for National Statistics said.

That sluggishne­ss points to the risks to confidence and investment as May negotiates secession from the world’s biggest trading bloc.

It “underlines the importance of getting a deal and also a long transition period”, said James Knightley, an economist at ING Bank NV in London.

“If the economy is weakening now, throw in hard Brexit – where the UK ceases to be able to trade as it was before – and that would put huge pressure on the economy and cause it to slow even more.”

The latest data confirm that the Brexit slowdown has finally arrived, as faster inflation hits households and wages fail to keep up. While the economy initially performed better than many expected after the referendum, it may now be heading into a phase of lower growth.

“Subdued for the rest of the year” was the summary offered by Dan Hanson at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce in response to the data.

The knock to May’s “strong and stable” economy – to use her election campaign slogan – may worry her and her Conservati­ve Party as she campaigns for the June 8 vote and prepares for what will be intense divorce talks with the EU. While she retains a healthy lead in polls, the gap with Labour has narrowed in recent weeks after an unpopular manifesto pledge.

May did get some good news today, with data showing net migration fell to a three-year low in 2016.

She is fighting the election on a renewed pledge to cut net migration to the “the tens of thousands,” despite her Conservati­ve Party failing to come even close since the promise was first made in 2010.

For the economy, there was an expectatio­n that the pressure on consumers could be offset by a boost to exports from the weaker sterling.

That didn’t prove to be the case at the start of the year, with net trade subtractin­g 1.4 percentage points from GDP. Neverthele­ss, some economists see growth picking up in the coming months.

“The poor trade performanc­e appears to have been partly driven by erratic factors” and not a “deteriorat­ion in the underlying net trade position,” said Ruth Gregory, an economist at Capital Economics.

“We have not altered our view that the economy will remain fundamenta­lly resilient in the coming quarters.” –

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