(C) Reuters. A shopper pushes a trolley in a supermarket in London
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LONDON (Reuters) – British consumer confidence in early May dipped back down to its joint-lowest level since the global financial crisis in 2009, despite moves by the government to start loosening its coronavirus lockdown, a survey showed on Friday.
GfK, a polling firm, said its consumer confidence index – which it is now publishing every two weeks – slipped to -34 in the May 1-14 period from -33 during the second half of April.
“Consumer confidence remains battered and bruised despite efforts at loosening the COVID-19 restrictions,” GfK’s client strategy director Joe Staton said.
“With unemployment claims rising by the highest rate on record and warnings of a severe recession and possible tax hikes, the damage done by the coronavirus pandemic to the UK economic landscape has been laid bare,” he added.
GfK’s Major Purchase Index improved for a second survey in a row but at -47 remained way below its level of 1 a year ago.
UK consumer confidence back at joint lowest level since 2009: GfK
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