British government debt to rocket in event of no Brexit deal

British government debt to rocket in event of no Brexit deal

by Joseph Anthony
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Government debt is set to rocket to levels not seen since the 1960s in the event of a no-deal Brexit, a leading economic think tank has warned.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said following last monthโ€™s spending review, Government borrowing was on course to top ยฃ50 billion next year, more than double what the Office for Budget Responsibility was forecasting as recently as March.

However, in the event of even a โ€œrelatively benignโ€ no-deal Brexit, the IFS said that could rise to almost ยฃ100 billion โ€“ while debt would climb to almost 90% of national income for the first time since the mid 1960s.

In its annual โ€œgreen budgetโ€, the IFS warned that in those circumstances, next yearโ€™s โ€œmini boomโ€ in public spending would be followed by another โ€œbustโ€ as ministers tried to get the public finances under control.

Analysis by Citi bank for the IFS calculated UK national income was already between ยฃ55 billion and ยฃ66 billion lower than it would have been if the country had voted Remain in the 2016 EU referendum.

As a result, Britain had missed out โ€œalmost entirelyโ€ on the bout in global growth of the last three years.

It warned that a no-deal Brexit was likely to mean two years of zero growth โ€“ even with a โ€œsubstantialโ€ fiscal and monetary response by the Government and the Bank of England.

Even when it returned to growth, it would remain weak at just 1.1%, leaving the economy 2.5% smaller than it would have been.

Citi said that leaving the EU with a Brexit deal should see the economy continuing to grow, albeit weakly at around 1.5% a year.

However further delay to Brexit would mean continued economic uncertainty with โ€œvery poorโ€ growth of around just 1% a year.

Overall, Citi, said that remaining in the EU would be the best outcome for economic growth.

However, if this happened under a Labour government committed to carrying out its policies on tax, nationalisation, share ownership and labour policy regulation, it was impossible to say whether the net effect would be better or worse than leaving the EU with a more โ€œgrowth-friendlyโ€ set of policies.

The IFS said ministers had now effectively abandoned former chancellor Philip Hammondโ€™s tax and spending rules, including his manifesto commitment to balance the budget by the mid 2020s.

It said the Governmentโ€™s day-to-day spending plans for public services were now close to the levels implied by Labourโ€™s 2017 election manifesto, and far higher than those in the Conservative manifesto.

IFS director Paul Johnson, said the figures meant Mr Javid could not afford any big tax giveaways when he comes to deliver his first budget.

He said that in the event of no-deal, any measures to support the economy would have to be strictly temporary.

โ€œThe Government is now adrift without any effective fiscal anchor,โ€ he said.

โ€œGiven the extraordinary level of uncertainty and risks facing the economy and public finances, it should not be looking to offer further permanent overall tax giveaways in any forthcoming budget.

โ€œIn the case of a no-deal Brexit, though, it should be implementing carefully targeted and temporary tax cuts and spending increases where it can effectively support the economy.

โ€œIt will be crucial that these programmes are temporary: an economy that turns out smaller than expected can, in the long run, support less public spending than expected, not more.โ€

REUTERS

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