
A “slow burn” rather than a “collapse”: this is how economists from the London School of Economics described, at the end of 2025, the effects of Brexit on the British economy. Since the Leave victory on June 23, 2016, uncertainty among economic players had skyrocketed, which quickly weighed on investment in the United Kingdom. Ten years later, it is still 12% to 13% below what it would have had it not been for Brexit, estimates the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the largest private American institute in this area.
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