No trade deal would cost EU twice as many jobs as Britain

More than twice as many jobs will be lost in the EU as in Britain if we leave without a trade deal, a report says.

About 1.2 million jobs would vanish in the remaining 27 EU countries after a ‘hard Brexit’, with nearly 530,000 axed here.

The findings were seized on as evidence that it was in the interests of both the UK and Europe to strike a deal. 

About 1.2 million jobs would vanish in the remaining 27 EU countries after a ‘hard Brexit’, with nearly 530,000 axed here

The report, by the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), warned of more than 290,000 job losses in Germany and approximately 140,000 in each of France and Italy.

But the Republic of Ireland would be worst hit relatively as more than 50,000 jobs could be lost – more than 2.5 per cent of the workforce. The report said: ‘The EU27 stands to lose considerably more than previously thought.’

Campaigners accused Brussels negotiators of putting more than one million jobs at risk across Europe by refusing to open trade talks.

Former Labour MP Gisela Stuart, chairman of the Change Britain pressure group, said: ‘With the EU in the midst of a youth unemployment crisis, it would be irresponsible for politicians in Brussels to refuse a deal which could then see over one million jobs lost in Europe.

‘It’s yet further evidence why it’s in the EU’s interests to strike a trade deal with the UK. Any attempts to delay trade talks will only be to the detriment of EU businesses.’

The report warned that Irish and Spanish farmers would suffer from a hard Brexit alongside the German car industry and businesses across France and Italy and beyond.

The findings were seized on as evidence that it was in the interests of both the UK and Europe to strike a deal. Pictured: Chancellor Philip Hammond

The findings were seized on as evidence that it was in the interests of both the UK and Europe to strike a deal. Pictured: Chancellor Philip Hammond

Written by three CEPR economists based at the University of Leuven in Belgium, it also noted that the Belgian steel sector would suffer both through a reduction in exports to the UK and also through a reduction in demand for steel that would have been used in German cars sold here. 

It said: ‘Both the UK and the EU27 would suffer substantial losses if they are denied free trade access to each other’s markets when Brexit happens.’

The nearly 530,000 job losses here represent just over 1.6 per cent of the British workforce of 32 million.

The 1.2 million losses in the EU account for around 0.6 per cent of those in work across the other 27 members of the bloc.

Gloomy OECD has to eat its own words

A leading global trade body yesterday raised its growth forecast for the British economy just weeks after warning Brexit could wreak similar damage to the Blitz.

Trimming its UK growth forecasts for this year from 1.6 per cent to 1.5 per cent, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said leaving the EU remained the ‘major risk’.

But it raised its growth forecasts for the UK for 2018 from 1 per cent to 1.2 per cent.

Just six weeks ago the Paris-based group said the Blitz spirit would be needed for the UK to withstand departure from the EU.

Speaking at the time, OECD secretary-general Angel Gurria said: ‘What was that thing that Churchill said? Stay calm and carry on. This is as valid now as it was then in the Blitz.’ Brexit campaigner John Longworth, the former head of the British Chambers of Commerce, criticised the body, saying: ‘Like so many organisations who are institutionally anti-Brexit … the OECD has talked down our economy again and again only to eat its words later.’

The OECD expects the UK economy to slow over the coming years, with growth easing from 1.8 per cent last year to 1.5 per cent this year, 1.2 per cent in 2018 and 1.1 per cent in 2019. It said: ‘The major risk for the economy is the uncertainty surrounding the exit process from the EU, which could hold back private spending more than projected.

‘However, prospects of maintaining the closest possible economic relationship with the EU would lead to stronger-than-expected growth.’

Last night Eurosceptic Tory MP Sir Bill Cash warned of ‘very adverse consequences’ for the EU if there is no deal, adding: ‘Their attitude is completely and totally counter-productive.’

Gerard Lyons, co-founder of Economists For Brexit, said: ‘There is no doubt that in economic terms, once the politics have been taken out of it, it is in the European Union’s best interests to have a deal with the UK.

‘It is in everyone’s interests to do a free trade deal. But in terms of the job losses, I would be very wary, because I think the UK can do very well.’

John Longworth, the former head of the British Chambers of Commerce, said: ‘This report indicates the importance of a deal to the EU.

However, if the UK Government applies the correct post-Brexit economic policies, the boost in the economy arising from these will mean no job losses at all in Britain.’

Meanwhile, the Bank of England has warned that millions of EU citizens will be left with useless life insurance policies unless a Brexit compromise is reached.

It said 30 million people and businesses in the EU have £40 billion of policies, such as life insurance, with British businesses. These will stop being valid unless the EU writes a law allowing them to continue.

About six million Britons have policies worth £20 billion with insurers across the Channel, and Parliament will need to pass a law here to avoid disruption.

The Bank’s governor, Mark Carney, said: ‘It’s absolutely in the interests of all parties, but very much in the interests of Europe, that elements of close co-operation are continued after Brexit.’

The Bank also warned that £26 trillion of contracts between UK and EU banks will stop working once we leave the bloc unless new laws are passed in Brussels and London.

It added that British lenders have strong enough cash reserves to survive if there is a no-deal Brexit.

The Bank carried out a so-called stress test to see if they could cope with unemployment more than doubling to 9.5 per cent, a 33 per cent fall in house prices and a 2.4 per cent contraction on the global economy.

This is much worse than what happened during the financial crisis. But the biggest seven British lenders would remain afloat, the test found.  

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