- Markit
Britain's services sector faced its worst month of growth in more than three years in April, indicating a further slowdown in total GDP growth in the short term ahead of the EU referendum. The Markit/CIPS PMI measure of business activity in Britain's services sector, which accounts for 79% of the UK's GDP, dropped further to 52.3 last month, reaching the lowest level since February 2013, down from 53.7 recorded in March, and below the estimate of 53.5.
The UK economy expanded by 0.4% in the first three months of the year, compared with the 0.6% growth in the final quarter of 2015. Recent surveys for the manufacturing and construction sectors for April suggested growth has since continued to slow, as businesses and consumers hold back amid concerns over the outcome of the referendum on June 23. The UK manufacturing sector encountered a surprise contraction in April that reflected in the PMI, as it entered negative territory for the first time in 4 years, plummeting under the 50 point mark to show 49.2 points. At the same time the UK's construction output rose at the slowest pace in nearly three years in April, with the PMI gauge of business activity within Britain's construction sector falling to 52 last month from 54.2 in March
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