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East Midlands economy to shrink by 10 per cent this year, according to KPMG

Figure is even worse than the 7.8 per cent fall the business consultancy predicted in June

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy could take even longer to recover than predicted

The East Midlands economy will shrink by 10 per cent this year, according to KPMG’s latest quarterly economic outlook.

The figure is even worse than the 7.8 per cent fall the business consultancy predicted in June.

However, it said if a vaccine can end to the pandemic by mid-2021, growth within the region could pick by 8.6 per cent next year, with the economy reaching pre-Covid 19 levels by early 2023.

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-wide, KPMG is forecasting GDP decline of 10.3 per cent for 2020, downgraded from the 7.2 per cent predicted in June.

But even just a three-month delay in rolling out the vaccine could see º£½ÇÊÓÆµ GDP growth lose more than one per cent in 2021, it warned.

A no-deal Brexit and limited progress in eradicating the pandemic could make recovery even tougher, it said.

The latest forecasting model suggests Derby and Ashfield will be hit hardest this year, while North Kesteven, in Lincs, looks set to face the lowest impact.

Leicester and Nottingham will be somewhere between the two.