Jamaica Gleaner

Bank of England warns of intensifie­d Brexit uncertaint­ies

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THE BANK of England warned Thursday that uncertaint­ies related to Brexit have “intensifie­d considerab­ly” since early November and are increasing­ly weighing on the United Kingdom’s, UK, economy.

While unanimousl­y deciding to keep the bank’s main interest rate unchanged at 0.75 per cent, as expected, the nine-member rate-setting panel noted a series of negative economic developmen­ts amid the Brexit impasse.

Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29, but Prime Minister Theresa May has been unable to get lawmakers to agree her Brexit deal and is delaying a vote on it until midJanuary.

At the moment, it looks like her deal, which foresees close ties between Britain and the EU on the trade in goods, will struggle to get through Parliament. What would happen then is extremely unclear, and the great economic concern is that Britain could crash out of the EU without a deal and without a transition period that will smooth the process to new trading arrangemen­ts.

As well as sharp fall in those UK stocks that primarily operate in the country and a further decline in the value of the pound, Bank of England policymake­rs said business investment was likely to remain weak and the housing market subdued.

“The further intensific­ation of Brexit uncertaint­ies, coupled with the slowing global economy, has also weighed on the near-term outlook for UK growth,” the rate-setters said, according to minutes of their meeting on Wednesday.

Bank staff said the UK economy may only grow by 0.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of the year from the previous three-month period, 0.1 percentage point lower than thought last month.

“The broader economic outlook will continue to depend significan­tly on the nature of EU withdrawal, in particular: the form of new trading arrangemen­ts between the European Union and the United Kingdom; whether the transition to them is abrupt or smooth; and how households,

businesses and financial markets respond.”

The British economy has slowed down since the country voted in June 2016 to leave the European Union and many forecaster­s are warning of a potential recession if no Brexit deal is agreed by the time Britain is due to leave the bloc.

Last month, the Bank of England itself said that in a worst-case scenario, the British economy could shrink by a massive eight per cent within a few months and unemployme­nt and inflation would spike.

In that “disorderly and disruptive” scenario, four decades of economic alignment would be reversed, with tariffs placed on exports and border checks reinstalle­d, and restrictio­ns could hit travellers and workers. Shortages of medicines and food could also materialis­e.

For many British businesses, the current stalemate in Parliament is worrying, especially those dependent on trading in the EU, and that helps explain why business investment has been so weak of late.

Both Britain and the EU have this week ramped up their preparatio­ns for a potential nodeal outcome.

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