UK

Exports from the UK to the EU fell by £5.3 billion (€6.19 billion), or 40.7 per cent, in January, while imports fell by £8.9 billion (€10.4 billion), or 28.8%, as the end of the transition period for the UK’s exit from the EU saw the introduction of new barriers to trade and increasing customs duties.

However, the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which published the figures, advised against reading too much into them, noting that companies had been stockpiling ahead of the entry into force of the new trading rules and may have been using existing stock instead of buying new goods.

It also pointed out that the number of businesses saying they could not export between the middle and the final week of January had fallen by 5.4 per cent and those saying they could not import had dropped by three per cent.

The ONS therefore concluded that the sharp fall was “likely the result of temporary factors”.

Other data published by the Office showed that the UK economy shrank by 2.9 per cent in January, in the middle of a third lockdown, and by nine per cent since before the start of the pandemic.

Manufacturing saw its first decline since April, with car manufacturing being especially hard hit, while health services activity saw an increase of 8.7 per cent, largely due to vaccine rollout and COVID testing schemes.

Related

Ryanair

Ryanair announces Winter 2023 schedule cuts caused by major Boeing delivery delays

September 28, 2023
by Anthea Cachia

The airline was set to receive 27 aircraft between September and December but will now only receive half

World’s most popular search engine, Google, turns 25

September 27, 2023
by Anthea Cachia

In one way or another, Google has become an influential factor in the operations of everyday life

That’s all folks! Netflix officially marks the end of its DVD-mailing era this week

September 26, 2023
by Anthea Cachia

The rental system was meant to last around four to five years, but instead it went on for 25 years