Brexit has made Britain the sick man of Europe
again
William
Keegan
The EU did wonders for the economy: that was why we
joined. Our departure from it is now all too obviously costing us that
prosperity
Sun 27 Nov
2022 07.00 GMT
When
recently asked on the Today programme to cite chapter and verse on the subject
of Brexit “opportunities” Michael Gove, the secretary of state for all seasons,
was hopelessly out of his depth.
However,
Gove missed a trick. What he should have said, but as a signed-up Brexiter
obviously could not, was that the only “opportunity” arising from Brexit was to
conduct a scientific experiment to demonstrate that the whole idea was a
mistake. Moreover, it was a confidence trick on the British public, the
majority of whom now realise that they have been had.
As business
and industry struggle with the consequences of imposing sanctions on our
ability to trade with our largest market, and citizens – known to economists as
“consumers” – struggle with the higher import prices imposed by the devaluation
resulting from Brexit, the polls are pronouncing people’s verdict on Brexit
with a vengeance.
A recent
YouGov poll tells us that 56% of people think we were wrong to leave the EU and
only 32% that we were right. Even 19% of those who own up to having voted leave
now think they were wrong. The only age group containing a majority still in
favour of Brexit is the over-65s – I have to say they are not among the
over-65s I myself bump into, but there it is. And 88% of those who voted Labour
in 2019 think leave was the wrong decision. (Keir Starmer and shadow chancellor
Rachel Reeves please note!)
It is
obvious that the more intelligent members of the Sunak/Hunt cabinet have got
the message from the CBI and elsewhere that we need, for the sake of our
economy and the general welfare, to rejoin the single market. But this is the
love that dare not speak its name, even though it appears that attitudes
towards immigration – free movement! – have changed since 2016, when the
egregious Boris Johnson, himself of Turkish ancestry, fomented anti-immigrant
feeling with nonsense about an imminent flood of Turkish immigrants.
Sunak has
picked up the message that the combination of Brexit and the chaos in the
Conservative and Brexit party has led foreign observers to conclude that
Britain is sinking fast. According to the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development, of the group of 20 leading economies, only Russia
is performing worse than the UK. Yes, we were known as the “sick man of Europe”
until we joined the European Union and – guess what – we have left the EU and
have regained that dubious status.
It was a
former Treasury permanent secretary, Lord Croham, who observed once: ‘What
matters is not balancing the budget but balancing the economy'
Membership
of the EU did great things for this country. Both Labour and Conservative
governments fought their corner and, on the whole, got what they wanted.
Margaret Thatcher and her righthand negotiator Lord Cockfield played a blinder
in the setting up of the single market, and John Major achieved wonders at
Maastricht with the UK’s opt-out from the single currency. As for rightwing
concerns about “ever closer” union, they were duly assuaged. In essence, what
those all too influential leavers achieved was a wholly unnecessary Brexit that
shot the economy in the foot.
The Office
for Budget Responsibility calculates the cumulative damage of Brexit will be
enough to knock 4% every year off our potential GDP. As Michael Saunders, a
former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, has said:
“The need for tax rises [and] spending cuts wouldn’t be there if Brexit hadn’t
reduced the economy’s potential output so much.” And the Financial Times
recently reported that many of the asset managers whom Sunak and Hunt were
trying to pacify after the Truss-Kwarteng fiasco were concerned about the
dangers of overdoing austerity!
It was a
former Treasury permanent secretary, Lord Croham, who observed to the historian
Lord Hennessy and me once: “What matters is not balancing the budget but
balancing the economy.” Yet, with the recent budget and the chancellor’s “shock
and horror” talk, we seem to be back to the era of sado-monetarism. We are
certainly a long way from balancing the economy.
The
economist Jim Ball used to say he was suspicious of the OBE – not the Order of
the British Empire, but the people who give you One Big Explanation.
For this
government, the OBE for our economic troubles was first Covid, then Ukraine. I
am not saying Brexit is the cause of all our problems but – my goodness! – it
has magnified them. With due respect to the memory of the late Prof Ball, I
should like to nominate Brexit as the One Big Explanation for why this economy
is faring so much worse than the rest of the G20.
.webp)
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