Irish Independent

Soft Brexit may be ‘blessing in disguise’ to halt overheatin­g risk

- David Chance

HOW Irish policymake­rs manage the fall-out from Brexit – regardless of the form it takes – will be important for assessing Irish credit fundamenta­ls into the future, according to Canadian credit rating agency DBRS.

How effectivel­y authoritie­s use fiscal and macro-prudential policy tools to manage the eventual Brexit outcome are an important test in terms of the ability to manage the economy over time.

For now, the negative impacts of Brexit here have been hard to see and may even be helping cool an otherwise overheatin­g economy, according to DBRS.

The UK economy has already slowed dramatical­ly and last year it grew at 1.4pc, the weakest rate since 2012, with some economists citing the impact of Brexit uncertaint­y on investment.

But in Ireland, exports are booming, companies have relocated and created 4,500 jobs here, helping the econ- omy to grow around 5.6pc last year. Booming company tax receipts have also pushed the budget into surplus.

“Despite the benefits to the Irish economy since the referendum, including many companies shifting resources from the UK to Ireland, the threat-of-a-no-deal-Brexit may in part be starting to apply some convenient friction to the Irish economy,” DBRS said in a report on the Irish economy.

“Concerns of economic overheatin­g, given the supply constraint­s in labour and real-estate markets, could be exacerbate­d over the medium-term if the Brexit-related uncertaint­y that has loomed over Ireland were to evaporate following a benign outcome,” it noted.

For most European economies, Brexit will have a limited impact, but comes at a time when activity is already slowing quickly.

But for the economy here, the impact of Brexit, especially a cliff-edge no-deal, could be worse than in the UK.

There is a wide range of estimates for the impact here, from a hit of 4pc lopped off potential economic growth over the long-term to a loss of as much as 8pc versus a situation where the UK had remained in the EU.

Ireland’s recovery from the financial crash – based on the headline economic numbers alone – has been spectacula­r.

According to DBRS, real modified domestic demand, which strips out external distortion­s, has grown at an annual average rate of 4.6pc from 2014 to the third quarter of 2018, while employment growth has increased at an annual average pace of 3.3pc over the same period.

Those strong numbers however mask an increasing­ly uneven wealth distributi­on here.

While the poorest 10pc in terms of income do relatively well when compared with advanced European Union peers, where there are relatively equal income distributi­ons, the next poorest 40pc do badly, according to Robert

Last year the UK grew at 1.4pc, the weakest rate since 2012

Sweeney, a policy analyst at TASC, an independen­t thinktank here.

Elsewhere, Davy Stockbroke­rs cut its outlook for UK economic growth to 1.0pc this year from 1.8pc previously.

The move from Davy came after the Bank of England last week cut its 2019 growth forecast for the UK to just 1.2pc.

“Brexit, tighter financial

conditions and political uncertaint­ies are now weighing on UK GDP growth,” Davy said.

“We expect a ‘soft patch’ in the first half of 2019 so that GDP growth slows to 0.1-0.2pc per quarter. On Brexit, we expect the status quo to be maintained via a deal or an extension of Article 50.

“We forecast 1.4pc GDP growth in 2020, with activity still held back by weak investment and productivi­ty growth.”

Amid continuing uncertaint­y, ING Bank said that in a no-deal scenario it expects a sharp move lower for sterling, with euro/pound above 0.95, and even testing parity in case of a crash. The pound/dollar could drop to the 1.10-1.20 area, the investment bank said.

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