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Brexit: UK faces £350m-a-week 'divorce bill' as result of leaving the EU | Brexit: UK faces £350m-a-week 'divorce bill' as result of leaving the EU |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Britain could be forced to pay the European Union a “divorce bill” of €20 billion (£18 billion) in the wake of the Brexit vote. | Britain could be forced to pay the European Union a “divorce bill” of €20 billion (£18 billion) in the wake of the Brexit vote. |
The “upper estimate” to separate from the bloc would cover the UK’s shared EU liabilities including, unpaid debt of €241 billion (£217 billion), and €63.8 billion (£57.5 billion) in pension liabilities, according to new analysis conducted by The Financial Times (FT). | The “upper estimate” to separate from the bloc would cover the UK’s shared EU liabilities including, unpaid debt of €241 billion (£217 billion), and €63.8 billion (£57.5 billion) in pension liabilities, according to new analysis conducted by The Financial Times (FT). |
The study is the first attempt to put a realistic “price tag” on leaving the EU with some EU officials even warning that the cost could be substantially higher. | The study is the first attempt to put a realistic “price tag” on leaving the EU with some EU officials even warning that the cost could be substantially higher. |
Former UK Trade Minister Lord Livingston said the cost spread over a year equates to £350 million a week. | |
In the run-up to the June referendum, Vote Leave repeatedly claimed £350 million was sent to the EU each week. It also claimed this money could be used to increase NHS funding if Brexit was successful. | In the run-up to the June referendum, Vote Leave repeatedly claimed £350 million was sent to the EU each week. It also claimed this money could be used to increase NHS funding if Brexit was successful. |
However, just hours after the Brexit announcement, Ukip leader Nigel Farage said: “I can’t and I would never have made that claim – it was one of the mistakes that the Leave campaign made.” | However, just hours after the Brexit announcement, Ukip leader Nigel Farage said: “I can’t and I would never have made that claim – it was one of the mistakes that the Leave campaign made.” |
London School of Economics Brexit expert, Professor Iain Begg, told The Independent: “The main implication is that, at least in the short term - stretching beyond not just a likely Brexit date (spring 2019) but the next UK general election - the UK will not achieve the reduction in its contribution to the EU budget that was promised in the referendum. | London School of Economics Brexit expert, Professor Iain Begg, told The Independent: “The main implication is that, at least in the short term - stretching beyond not just a likely Brexit date (spring 2019) but the next UK general election - the UK will not achieve the reduction in its contribution to the EU budget that was promised in the referendum. |
“The presumed windfall for the NHS will, therefore, become a disappointment. There might be a one-off settlement as part of a Brexit deal, but as the estimates in the FT article show it would be a huge bill.” | “The presumed windfall for the NHS will, therefore, become a disappointment. There might be a one-off settlement as part of a Brexit deal, but as the estimates in the FT article show it would be a huge bill.” |
The disclosure is likely to cause more turmoil for foreign markets as the pound slumped to a 168-year low on Wednesday. | The disclosure is likely to cause more turmoil for foreign markets as the pound slumped to a 168-year low on Wednesday. |
The pound dropped by almost one per cent against the dollar during a course of exchanges in the Commons before rallying, ending up around 0.73 per cent against the dollar at $1.22. | The pound dropped by almost one per cent against the dollar during a course of exchanges in the Commons before rallying, ending up around 0.73 per cent against the dollar at $1.22. |
Economist Thomas Sampson told The Independent: “It’s important to remember that the exit bill would be a one-off payment and in the longer run it is likely to be dwarfed by the broader economic costs resulting from reduced integration with EU markets, particularly if the government pursues a hard Brexit.” | Economist Thomas Sampson told The Independent: “It’s important to remember that the exit bill would be a one-off payment and in the longer run it is likely to be dwarfed by the broader economic costs resulting from reduced integration with EU markets, particularly if the government pursues a hard Brexit.” |
A Government spokesperson declined to comment on the claims. | A Government spokesperson declined to comment on the claims. |
"As the Prime Minister has said, we will invoke Article 50 no later than the end of March next year. We are not going to provide a running commentary on leaving the EU,” the spokesperson said. | "As the Prime Minister has said, we will invoke Article 50 no later than the end of March next year. We are not going to provide a running commentary on leaving the EU,” the spokesperson said. |
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