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British consumers upbeat despite Brexit

October 17, 2016

British consumer confidence has risen markedly over the past three months, consultancy Deloitte has reported in its fresh quarterly study. But shoppers in London have a completely different view on the economy.

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Shoppers in London
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/H. Mckay

Consumers in the United Kingdom displayed strong confidence in the country's economic development despite Britain's vote to leave the UK.

Sentiment among consumers nationwide rose by 3 percentage points from its previous quarterly survey, business advisory Deloitte reported Monday.

This meant that consumers in the country showed the highest level of confidence in five years, with the 3-percent surge marking the biggest increase since late 2014.

Deloitte pointed out, though, that in London consumer sentiment dropped by 3 percent.

Looming uncertainty

"The Brexit vote may be weighing on a region in which 60 percent of the population voted to remain in the EU and where reliance on financial services, migration and capital flows are especially strong," Deloitte Chief Economist Ian Stewart said in a statement.

May wants to avoid hard Brexit

Employers there have concerns about Britain's uncertain future relationship with the EU. Prime Minister Theresa May has signaled she will pursue controls over migration which could reduce the UK's future access to the EU's single market.

Deloitte pointed to continued growth in retail sales going into the fourth quarter, but noted that spending power might be challenged in 2017 and beyond, with inflation expected to rise and negotiations on the country's exit from the EU to start.

hg/jd (Reuters, AFP)