At the distance that most shots are taken in the UK, I am not convinced that it makes any real world difference. So if the rifle is handier as a consequence of being shorter, then that's fine.
that might be quite true; however, point is also that it's needless to use certain chamberings with short barrels as ballistically that chamberings efficient spectrum is ruined by the short barrel, and in turn the shooter would have been better served on many levels by an alternative chambering.
you see, if a short barrel .308 or 7x57 or 8x57 is more efficient, has less recoil, better velocity, less barrel erosion, less noisey, less muzzle blast, less powder consumption, etc. etc. than say a short barrel 270, 6.5 or 7mm rem mag, or 300 win mag,,then why would anyone buy the latter? there's no argument really
manufacturers know full well that some of the rifles they sell in short barrels or particular twist rates are in no way shape or form appropriate for the chambering, but they quite simply think consumers are too stupid to understand this, and that people will assume the manufacturers know what they're doing..when in fact they're just making a mass scale production cheaper and not delivering a particularly suitable product
mass manufactured rifles usually suffer from:
a. barrel lenghts not cut to the appropriate calibre/chambering specs
b. twist rates are supplied mid-range and not to accommodate heavy for calibre bullets
c. bedding is ignored
d. triggers are set too heavy at lawyers requests, actually at the harm of deer who suffer from jerked trigger squeezes.
e. Throats not given consideration for usage of heavy or long for calibre bullets
f. sling swivels are likely to be attached to bipods and should be backplated internally
g. People have different lengths of pull!