Activity among UK manufacturers contracted at its fastest pace for three years in July, according to a closely watched survey.
the first to have full data since the UK's vote to leave the EU, showed a fall to 48.2, the lowest since February 2013.
The survey adds to concerns that the vote prompted a sharp fall in activity.
A reading above 50 indicates expansion, but below 50 indicates contraction.
The decline was sharper than an initial reading of 49.1 indicated late last month.
The
Markit/CIPS manufacturing index is based on a survey of 600 industrial
companies and reflects data on orders, output, employment, suppliers'
delivery times and companies' inventories.
Rob Dobson, senior
economist at Markit, said the survey came "amid increasingly widespread
reports that business activity has been adversely affected by the EU
referendum".
He added: "The downturn was felt across industry,
with output scaled back across firms of all sizes and across the
consumer, intermediate and investment goods sectors, although exporters
did report a boost from the weaker pound."
'Little consolation'
Figures released last week showed the UK economy grew by 0.6% in the three months to the end of June.
However, by far the strongest growth was in April, followed by a sharp easing off in May and June.
Commenting
on the Markit data, Martin Beck, senior economic adviser to the EY Item
Club, said: "There was little consolation from the detail of July's
survey. Output contracted across the consumer, intermediate and
investment goods sectors.
"Employment in manufacturing declined
for the seventh month in succession and input-price inflation rose to a
five-year high off the back of sterling's weakness and higher commodity
prices.
"The one bright spot was a rise in export orders, no doubt helped by the decline in the pound."
In
another survey published on Monday, the Institute of Chartered
Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) said business confidence had
fallen in the wake of the referendum.
Its business confidence
index had been at minus 0.7 in the month running up to the vote, but
dropped to minus 27.7 in the period from 24 June to 20 July.
The
latest economic data comes as the Bank of England's Monetary Policy
Committee (MPC) prepares to issue its latest interest rate-setting
decision on Thursday.
The MPC had been widely expected to cut interest rates last month, but unexpectedly left them unchanged.
This time, rates are likely to fall from 0.5% to a new low of 0.25%, analysts predict.
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