The economy has not improved. It has gotten worse, if anything.

The phrase if anything is used to say that you could make an argument that not only refutes, but also goes in direct opposition to a prior claim or statement.

The economy has improved. [claim]
The economy has not improved. [refutation]
It has gotten worse if anything. [going beyond refutation into a directly opposite claim]
 
NOTE: Despite the name of this dictionary, most British English speakers use 'got' and not 'gotten' as the past participle of 'get'.
 
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However, the name Britannica Dictionary seems to be slightly misleading. According to the landing page of its website it is a dictionary of American English. Go figure.
 

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