Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Chancellor did not mention Brexit

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JEREMY Hunt’s Autumn Statement began with mention of the adverse effects of the Covid pandemic and the war in Ukraine which, he considered, created a £55bn ‘black hole’ in Government funding. What he did not mention was the ‘elephant in the room’: Brexit. Recently there has been an increasing deluge of financial experts stating their views.

Michael Saunders, who left the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) this summer, stated: “The UK economy as a whole has been permanentl­y damaged by Brexit. It’s reduced the economy’s potential output significan­tly (and) eroded business investment. If we hadn’t had Brexit, we probably wouldn’t be talking about an austerity budget this week. The need for tax rises (and) spending cuts wouldn’t be there, if Brexit hadn’t reduced the economy’s potential output so much.”

Professor Swati Dhingra, a present member of the MPC, said that food prices were 6% higher because of Brexit, and continued: “It’s undeniable now that we’re seeing a much bigger slowdown in trade in the UK compared to the rest of the world. The simple way of thinking about what Brexit has done to the economy is that in the period after the referendum there was the biggest depreciati­on that any of the world’s four major economies have seen overnight. That contribute­d to increasing prices and reduced wages.”

Perhaps the most telling admission comes from the assistant editor of The Telegraph, Jeremy Warner, who recently admitted: “Downbeat prediction­s by the Treasury and others on the economic consequenc­es of leaving the EU, contemptuo­usly dismissed at the time by Brexit campaigner­s as ‘Project Fear’, have been on a long fuse, but they have turned out to be overwhelmi­ngly correct, and if anything have underestim­ated both the calamitous loss of internatio­nal standing and the scale of the damage that six years of policy confusion and ineptitude has imposed on the country.”

The Office for Budget Responsibi­lity has maintained that Brexit will cause a long-term loss of 4% of the UK’s GDP. A recent analysis by the Centre for European Reform found that by the end of

2021 UK GDP was already 5.2% smaller than it would have been had we not left the EU. In fiscal terms this equates exactly to the £55bn ‘black hole’ in Government revenue.

In 2016 we were lied to by a group of Conservati­ves obsessed by ideology and in Boris Johnson’s case, a greed for power. In 2019 the same group, supported this time by the whole Conservati­ve Party, lied to us in order to maintain power. They have been disastrous for the country. We should not forgive them.

Mike Baldwin

Devon

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