Bank of England: No-Deal Brexit to Be Worse than 2008 Crisis


Bank of England: No-Deal Brexit to Be Worse than 2008 Crisis

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Britain crashing out of the European Union without a deal could trigger a deep and damaging recession with worse consequences for the UK economy than the 2008 financial crisis, the Bank of England warned.

Raising the stakes as Theresa May battles to win support in parliament for her Brexit deal, the central bank said that failure to reach a deal with Brussels – with no transition period to a new trading relationship – could spark an immediate economic crash, The Guardian reported.

GDP could fall by as much as 8% next year, exceeding the depth of the recession that followed the financial crisis in one of the worst-ever peacetime capitulations for the economy. However, the gloomy figures were criticized by respected economists Paul Krugman, a former winner of the Nobel prize in economics, and Andrew Sentance, a former member of the bank’s interest rate-setting committee, who said they were too severe.

According to the Bank’s analysis, house prices could fall by 30% and the unemployment rate could increase from its current level of 4.1% to about 7.5%, while interest rates could be forced to rise as inflation increased to 6.5%.

In sharp contrast, the Bank said May’s Brexit deal had the potential to encourage a bounce for economic growth over the next five years, relative to its current forecast, although only if Britain maintains the closest possible trading ties with the EU.

In the event ministers agree a close economic partnership with Brussels of the kind advocated by the prime minister, the best-case scenario could see GDP rise by as much as 1.75% over the next five years.

It said a “less close” economic partnership, with customs checks on UK-EU trade but without a hard border in Northern Ireland, could cause the economy to shrink by about 0.75% over the same period.

The Bank warned that both scenarios were not definite forecasts and relied on it making assumptions on Brexit decisions that had not yet been made or agreed with the EU.

It also did not model the potential outcome of Britain falling back on to the Northern Ireland “backstop” arrangement after the transition period, even though that was a possibility.

All of the outcomes are still worse than if Britain had voted to stay in the EU two years ago, with the Bank estimating that GDP starts all of its scenarios about 1% lower than it would had there been a vote for remain.

In making its assessment, the Bank said the consequences of a no-deal scenario would be particularly severe because the majority of UK companies have made no preparations for Britain leaving the EU without a transition period or plan for a new economic partnership.

While the worst-case scenario is extreme, it is likely to raise eyebrows because it includes the Bank raising interest rates as high as 5.5% – something which many economists doubt would happen because it would amplify the damaging effects of a no-deal Brexit.

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