Western Mail

Price hikes to hit millions of families with no-deal Brexit, report claims

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MILLIONS of families would be hit by price rises of more than £500 a year with the poorest taking the biggest hit if Brexit happens without the UK reaching a withdrawal deal with the European Union, a report warns.

The average yearly household bill would rise by £260 in a “no deal” scenario in which Britain imposes the same tariffs on the EU as it does for other World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) countries. But three million families could see price rises of more than £500 while the proportion­ate impact on the poorest fifth of households would be 33% greater than on the richest fifth, the joint report by the Resolution Foundation and Sussex University’s UK Trade Policy Observator­y found.

It shows that walking away from deadlocked Brexit negotiatio­ns would be the “worst possible outcome”, the authors said.

The analysis of a “no deal” scenario where the UK imposes WTO “most favoured nation” tariffs on the EU found that levies on dairy imports would rise by 45%, meat products by 37%, and clothing, footwear, drinks and tobacco by 10%.

These tariffs would feed through into significan­t price increases, with the average price of dairy goods rising by 8.1%, meat products by 5.8% and cars and other vehicles by 5.5%, the report said.

The hit to living standards would be greater for lower-income households as they tend to spend a greater share of their income on food and essential items of clothing which would be most affected by new tariffs.

A different “no deal” Brexit scenario, in which the UK unilateral­ly reduces all tariffs to zero, would reduce household spending by an average of £130 a year.

But this is unlikely to happen as it would reduce Britain’s ability to strike free trade deals around the world, and expose some industries to “sharp competitiv­e pressures” as other countries would not be obliged to reduce their own tariffs.

Stephen Clarke, economic analyst at the Resolution Foundation, said: “The Government has said that while it wants a comprehens­ive trade agreement, it is also preparing for a ‘no deal’ scenario when we leave the EU. Such an outcome – which could see the UK imposing tariffs on EU imports – would increase the annual shopping bills of millions of households by £500.

“While trade may not have been the biggest issue in the referendum, it is one that will affect the day-today living standards of every family in Britain. The Government must rightly continue to prioritise a comprehens­ive new trade agreement with the EU in order to avoid households having to fork out for a ‘no deal’ outcome.”

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