KEY POINTS
  • The U.K. economy is worse off today than before Brexit, according to new analysis from Goldman Sachs.
  • Britain's decision to leave the European Union has hampered the economy to the tune of 5% versus other comparable countries, the estimates showed.
  • The Wall Street bank attributed the shortfall to three key factors: reduced trade; weaker business investment; and lower immigration from the EU.
Pro-EU demonstrators protest outside Parliament against Brexit on the fourth anniversary of Britain's official departure from the European Union in London, United Kingdom on January 31, 2024.

LONDON — Post-Brexit Britain has "significantly underperformed" other advanced economies since the 2016 EU referendum, according to new analysis from Goldman Sachs, which aims to quantify the economic cost of the Leave vote.

In a note last week entitled "The Structural and Cyclical Costs of Brexit," the Wall Street bank estimates that the U.K. economy grew 5% less over the past eight years than other comparable countries.