Jamaica Gleaner

UK Brexit deal estimated to cost US$90billon

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ARESPECTED British think tank slammed Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal on Wednesday, concluding that the economy would be 3.5 per cent smaller over the next decade compared with staying in the European Union.

The study by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research says the agreement would deliver a £70billion (US$90 billion) blow to the United Kingdom. Researcher­s said that the outlook is clouded by political and economic uncertaint­y.

“We would not expect economic activity to be boosted by the approval of the government’s proposed Brexit deal,” the group said.

The researcher­s based their prediction over the long term on the assumption that the UK would leave the bloc with a free trade agreement with the EU after a transition lasting until 2021 while negotiatin­g new deals with other nations. It said that higher “barriers to goods and services, trade and restrictio­ns to migration” would force the economy to slow.

As politician­s squabble over how and when Britain will leave the EU, Brexit is reshaping the economy. Initially planned for March, Brexit was pushed back to Halloween and now is not likely to happen before January. Companies are meanwhile shifting investment­s, creating new supply chains and stockpilin­g goods to mitigate any damage that would occur from leaving the EU, with or without a deal.The NIESR estimated that the economy was 2.5 per cent smaller than it would have been had Britain not voted in 2016 to leave the European Union.

The British government says it plans a different scenario than the one considered by the think tank.

NEGOTIATIO­NS ONGOING

“We are aiming to negotiate a comprehens­ive free trade agreement with the European Union, which is more ambitious than the standard free trade deal that NIESR has based its findings on,” the Treasury department said in a statement.

The research suggested a no-deal Brexit would cause an even greater loss to the economy, with a 5.6 per cent blow to GDP.

Liberal Democrat Brexit spokesman Tom Brake said the figures “come as no surprise”.

“The Tories’ obsession with Brexit at any cost puts our future prosperity at risk,” he said. “It is unconscion­able that any government would voluntaril­y adopt a policy that would slow economic growth for years to come.”

 ?? AP ?? A workman sweeps up leaves in front of 10 Downing Street in London, on Wednesday, October 30. Britons will be heading out to vote in December in an early national vote that could break the country’s political impasse over Brexit.
AP A workman sweeps up leaves in front of 10 Downing Street in London, on Wednesday, October 30. Britons will be heading out to vote in December in an early national vote that could break the country’s political impasse over Brexit.

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