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Carney Warns on No Deal Brexit

It goes without saying that nobody campaigning for the UK to leave the EU in the 2016 referendum ever spoke of the possibility of a cliff edge, no deal Brexit where the legal regime changes, literally, overnight. It remains far from clear if the UK government would allow such a situation to happen, but at the moment, without a deal being struck or a further substantive event (cancellation of A50 notice or a further referendum) it is the default position.

The governor of the Bank of England is a politically neutral figure, but as regular readers of this column will appreciate, it is now impossible to divorce the political from the purely economic. Mark Carney has spoken out against a “no deal” Brexit, urging politicians to find a solution. Carney warned that such an outcome at a time of rising global trade tensions and a slowing of China’s economy could create an “economic shock”.

Speaking in London’s Barbican centre, Carney noted: "It is in the interests of everyone, arguably everywhere that a Brexit solution is found. It is possible that new rules of the road will be developed for a more inclusive and resilient global economy. At the same time, there is a risk that countries turn inwards, undercutting growth and prosperity for all. A no-deal would be an economic shock for this country, and this would send a signal globally about re-founding globalisation. That would be unfortunate.”

Carney pointed out that Brexit had created a “high level of uncertainty” and consequently "companies are holding back on making big decisions". This, he argued, was why the UK needed to secure a good withdrawal agreement and have the transitional period (which would be abandoned in the case of a “no deal” scenario). He noted that recent global growth had peaked at 4% in 2016 and had been gradually slowing since. Whilst he believed that global growth would stabilise, rising trade tensions and a further slowdown in China could deflect this:

"The Bank of England estimates that a 3% drop in Chinese GDP would knock 1% off global activity, including half a per cent off each of UK, US and euro area GDP," Carney said.

He warned a "larger increase in tariffs of 10 percentage points between the US and all of its trading partners could take 2.5% per cent off US output and 1% off global output."

Carney made a general plea to politicians to address economic risks rather than simply ignore them, pointing out:

"Although the economic and financial imbalances in the global economy do not yet appear to contain the seeds of their own demise, global momentum is softening.”

Dr. Mike Campbell
About Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.
 

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