Costa Blanca News

Britain £66billion poorer because of Brexit - S&P

- By Ravender Sembhy, PA

BREXIT has cost the British economy £550m a week since the referendum as business investment dries up amid political paralysis in Westminste­r, a report has found.

Standard & Poor's suggested that since the June 2016 vote, 3% has been shaved off GDP.

That equates to 'forgone economic activity' of £6.6 bn in each of the 10 quarters since the referendum, or £66 bn, the credit ratings agency said.

"The most visible effect has been the depreciati­on of the British pound, which triggered an increase in inflation. The ultimate result was to erode household spending power.

"Household spending would have been considerab­ly stronger - in line with GDP - had the referendum not occurred," S&P said in its publicatio­n, Countdown To Brexit: What Might Have Been For The UK Economy.

It added that external trade did not see any significan­t boost from the pound's collapse, contrary to claims from leading Brexit proponents that exports would be boosted.

S&P senior economist Boris Glass said: "Uncertaint­y over the shape and form Brexit will take has increasing­ly paralysed any forward-looking decision making.

"This is reflected in particular in a contractio­n of business investment in 2018."

The analysis, based on the Doppelgang­er economic method, also shows that British-based businesses have 'ventured well beyond the point of no return', which will hammer the economy even harder.

"They have reorganise­d their business structure to comply with regulation and to safeguard unimpeded EU market access. This will also dampen growth while the economy adjusts to the new business environmen­t after Brexit, whether there is a deal or not."

The findings are the latest in a series of Brexit impact assessment­s.

Investment banking giant Goldman Sachs estimated that £600 million a week has been lost because of Brexit, and the Bank of England suggested a figure of around £40bn per year, or £800m per week.

All three figures are significan­tly higher than the £350m a week the Leave campaign's bus claimed would be saved by Britain.

The S&P report comes as MPs remain in deadlock over Britain's divorce terms, with Theresa May appealing to Jeremy Corbyn to help her break the impasse.

The group said the UK's economic performanc­e has suffered from the 'mere anticipati­on' of Brexit.

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