Treasury coffers may take a £66bn annual hit if Britain
goes for a hard Brexit, cabinet ministers have been warned. Leaked government
papers suggest that leaving the single market and switching to World Trade
Organisation (WTO) rules would cause GDP to fall by up to 9.5% compared with
staying in the EU.
The draft cabinet committee paper seen by the Times is
based on forecasts from the controversial study into the predicted impact of
quitting the EU published by George Osborne in April during the referendum
campaign. Although the then chancellor faced widespread criticism over the
report, the Treasury stands by its calculations, according to the Times.
The leaked document is based on a study published by George
Osborne during the referendum campaign. Photograph: Jose Luis Magana/AP
The
documents says: “The Treasury estimates that UK GDP would be between 5.4% and
9.5% of GDP lower after 15 years if we left the EU with no successor
arrangement, with a central estimate of 7.5%.
“The
net impact on public sector receipts – assuming no contributions to the EU and
current receipts from the EU are replicated in full – would be a loss of
between £38bn and £66bn per year after 15 years, driven by the smaller size of
the economy.”
Brexit
backers who have seen the documents told the newspaper the figures were
unrealistic and claimed there was a push to “make leaving the single market
look bad”.
But
prominent remain campaigners pushing for a soft Brexit that would keep Britain
in the single market said the documents showed the “horrific damage” of leaving
the trading bloc.
The
former Conservative minister Anna Soubry MP, a supporter of the Open Britain
campaign, said: “The horrific damage of a hard Brexit is clear. Less tax
revenue means less to invest in schools and hospitals, lower trade and
investment means businesses and jobs at risk.
“This
danger is precisely why parliament must be involved in the principles to guide
the Brexit negotiations. Britain will leave the EU, but we must do so in a way
the protects our prosperity and reduces risk. The government should now make
clear the ‘WTO option’ isn’t on the table.”
The Prime
Minister, Theresa May, is facing growing pressure to allow MPs a vote on Brexit
and the government is also fighting a legal challenge over the use of royal
prerogative to invoke article 50, which triggers the process of leaving the EU.
The
Brexit secretary, David Davis, told MPs the government would “observe the
constitutional and legal precedents” on giving MPs a vote on any treaty setting
out Britain’s new relationship with the EU.
The Liberal Democrat leader, Tim Farron, said the leaked
documents showed quitting the single market would wreck the economy.
“This is yet more proof that hard Brexit would be an act of
sheer economic vandalism,” he said. The Liberal Democrats will stand up for
Britain’s membership of the single market. We cannot stand by while this
reckless, divisive and uncaring Conservative government wrecks the UK economy.”
A government spokesman said: “We want the best outcome for
Britain. That means pursuing a bespoke arrangement which gives British
companies the maximum freedom to trade with and operate in the single market,
and enables us to decide for ourselves how we control immigration.”
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/oct/11/hard-brexit-treasury-66bn-eu-single-market?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
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