Britain’s 2016 vote to leave the European Union has acted as a durable headwind for the country’s economy, compounding longstanding structural weaknesses that were part of the political case for leaving the bloc. A decade on, indicators spanning output, prices, finance and markets collectively trace the contours of that economic drag.
Growth
Economists generally conclude that Brexit has weakened Britain’s economic performance, although disentangling its effects from the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic - which struck as Britain completed its exit - is challenging. On a per-capita basis, Britain ranks second-lowest among the Group of Seven advanced economies, ahead of only Germany, a nation whose manufacturing-heavy profile has struggled to adapt to shifting global trade conditions.
Successive governments have not managed to restart the economy in any sustained fashion. Growth has been characterized by fits and starts, and long-term productivity gains have remained muted. Supporters of Brexit argue that departing the EU offers eventual policy flexibility and that the direst forecasts for economic harm did not come to pass. Some industries have prospered - notably fintech, life sciences and AI - where Britain keeps a strong global footprint. Yet even these areas, economists say, have likely fallen short of what might have been achieved in a less uncertain and more investment-friendly environment, with political turbulence and trade frictions acting as consistent constraints.
Inflation
Since the referendum, Britain has recorded more inflation than any other Western European country save Austria, with consumer prices up 41.4% as of May 2026, according to official data. Early explanations for elevated inflation pointed to one-off shocks - sterling’s sharp depreciation after the referendum and the energy and commodity effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Over time, however, failure to tame inflation has become entrenched.
Adam Posen, an ex-Bank of England rate-setter and president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics think tank, attributes Britain’s inflation trajectory to weaker macroeconomic governance. "In a world where the U.S. is not providing global economic insurance, a UK that is neither in Europe nor fully with the U.S. is a small, open economy in a fundamentally more exposed position than it’s been for decades. Brexit reinforces that," he said, pointing to political instability, fiscal fragility and lacklustre productivity as structural contributors to inflation persistence.
Financial services
In 2015, Britain’s financial services exports outpaced the combined exports of France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands and Italy. By 2024 those five countries collectively overtook the UK, evidence that London’s dominance on the continent has been diluted. Research firm New Financial reports that between 2015 and 2025 the economic output of Britain’s financial services sector fell by 27%, and that the UK lost market share in 10 of 12 categories of international finance.
Despite these shifts, London remains Europe’s leading financial centre and continues to be the largest hub for trading in the nearly $10 trillion-a-day global currency markets. The picture is one of relative still-strength amid clear competitive erosion.
Business investment
Prolonged uncertainty about Britain’s trading relationship after Brexit depressed business investment for much of the decade. Investment is only around 12% higher than its level in mid-2016, compared with increases of 23% in France and 48% in the United States over the same span. Germany’s investment performance has been weaker still, with growth of just 1%, reflecting its own economic difficulties.
Bonds and market confidence
British government bonds (gilts) have shown greater volatility than sovereign debt in other G7 countries, as measured by the 10-year standard deviation of benchmark 10-year bonds. That heightened gyration has eroded the perception of gilts as a "safe haven". The country’s weak inflation record has also elevated expectations for interest rates, increasing the yields demanded by investors and adding to financing pressures.
Political fragility remains part of the backdrop. Keir Starmer’s announcement on Monday that he will quit as prime minister - coming in the same week as the referendum anniversary - underscores the instability of leadership, with Britain poised to have its seventh leader in a decade. The bond market’s vulnerabilities were exposed acutely during the 2022 gilt market episode when the budget plans of then-prime minister Liz Truss triggered a rout that forced the Bank of England to step in and led to the resignation of the prime minister and her finance minister.
Sterling
The pound is roughly 10% weaker against both the dollar and the euro than it was before the 2016 vote, a depreciation that has pushed up import costs and fed into the inflation problem even as Britain faced energy shocks from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and more recent tensions tied to the Iran war. Sterling has shown acute sensitivity to political developments, hitting a record low against the dollar during the 2022 mini-budget crisis.
Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Markets, summed up investor sentiment by saying: "Sterling has probably offered a better yield than many other major currencies but generally hasn’t performed as well as that yield would suggest, which does suggest that there’s a policy risk premium being built up." He also noted renewed questions about the pound’s reserve currency standing amid concerns over UK debt levels.
Even so, the pound remains the fourth most actively traded currency globally, although its share of global turnover has declined sharply according to the Bank for International Settlements foreign exchange survey. This year, analysts point out, sterling has been somewhat more resilient to political shocks amid marginally firmer economic conditions.
Equity markets
Domestic-focused investors in the FTSE 250 - the index that tracks mid-cap UK companies - would have seen a real-term loss of around 2% since the 2016 vote, against inflation-adjusted gains of 13% in France and 19% in Germany, before dividends. By contrast, the larger-cap FTSE 100, whose constituents have a heavier international footprint, reached record highs earlier this year but nonetheless trades at a significant discount to U.S. and European markets.
Overall, the decade since the referendum has left a mixed but predominantly challenging legacy: pockets of industry strength amid broadly weaker growth, higher inflation and diminished market positions in areas that once underpinned Britain’s global financial preeminence.