Scottish Daily Mail

UK output ‘could rise by 4pc af ter leaving EU’

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

OFFICIAL forecasts of a major hit to the economy from leaving the EU are flawed, a report says today.

It challenges a leaked Whitehall analysis that predicts Brexit will mean much lower growth.

Instead the 20-page study from the Economists for Free Trade group says UK output could be 4 per cent higher after 15 years.

The report argues that the official forecasts are little different to the pre-referendum Treasury prediction­s dubbed Project Fear.

The latest figures come ahead of a Cabinet meeting tomorrow to decide Britain’s negotiatin­g position on post-Brexit trade. Eleven senior ministers will convene at Chequers to try to reach an agreement.

The report will provide ammunition for pro-Leave Cabinet ministers such as Boris Johnson and Michael Gove, who favour greater divergence from Brussels rules.

Pro-Remain ministers, including Chancellor Philip Hammond, want to keep the UK in close alignment with the EU after Brexit.

The new report, ‘Alternativ­e Brexit Economic Analysis’, was written by four leading independen­t economists.

Whitehall forecasts leaked last month suggested that growth could be between 2 and 8 per cent lower over 15 years after leaving the EU. The North-East and West Midlands were predicted to be the worst-hit.

However, today’s report says the forecasts – yet to be officially published – ignore the potential benefits of free trade.

‘The latest Whitehall analysis can only be properly assessed and subjected to rigorous outside scrutiny if it is published,’ it said.

‘The failure to do so – together with the close similarity of its results to previous discredite­d Treasury analyses – has fuelled suspicion about the objectivit­y of the work.

‘The report shows that if the Government’s Brexit policy is fed into the new Whitehall model and unreasonab­le assumption­s are corrected, the long-term economic impact of Brexit is positive. We find that the level of GDP could be between 2 per cent and 4 per cent higher in 15 years than if the UK had remained in the EU, rather than up to 8 per cent lower.’

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