Scottish Daily Mail

UK economy is thriving afterBrexi­tvote,admits Remainer ex-minister

- By Hugo Duncan in London and James Burton in Davos

a REMaIN-backing former Treasury minister yesterday admitted the economy is thriving despite the doom-laden forecasts of Project Fear.

Lord O’Neill, a close ally of George Osborne, said the UK was better placed to deal with Brexit than he feared.

any negative impact of leaving the EU would be ‘dwarfed’ by the brightenin­g global outlook, he added.

His surprising­ly upbeat comments came as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) stuck to its gloomy tone – despite hugely underestim­ating the resilience of the UK economy since the referendum.

Brexit supporters also seized on Lord O’Neill’s change of heart.

Speaking to the BBC ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos, he praised the ‘robust’ economy. ‘That is because some parts of the country, led by the North West, are actually doing way better than people seem to realise or appreciate,’ he said. ‘The rest of the world is also doing way better...’ asked if he had been too pessimisti­c about Brexit, the former Goldman Sachs economist said: ‘I’m almost embarrasse­d to accept that it might sound like that. Because of course in principle I share the views of many that Brexit is a really weird thing for the UK to impose on itself...

‘and maybe this [better global growth] means the country’s going to be able to cope with Brexit better than certainly somebody like me might have thought some time ago.’ He argued that other factors such as boosting output in the so-called Northern Powerhouse – a project spearheade­d by Mr Osborne – were more important than Brexit for the economy.

Lord O’Neill, who quit the Government in 2016 after the referendum, added: ‘Brex- iteers are going to be like the cat with the cream.’ The IMF was more gloomy, however. It forecast growth of 1.5 per cent this year and next year – putting Britain behind the US, Germany and France. But critics pointed out that the IMF predicted growth of just 1.1 per cent for 2017 – but now believes it grew by 1.7 per cent.

Brexit campaigner John Longworth, the former head of the British Chambers of Commerce, said: ‘It is interestin­g that hitherto Remainers are beginning to recognise that Project Fear was completely flawed.’

a Treasury spokesman said: ‘We are building a Britain that is fit for the future by improving skills, backing innovation and investing in infrastruc­ture.’

a veteran central banker last night said the world financial system was dangerousl­y stretched amid warning signs that echo the last economic crash. William White, a top official at the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t, said years of emergency cash had left markets addicted to debt.

He told the Daily Telegraph: ‘The lesson has somehow been forgotten.’

‘Project Fear was completely flawed’

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