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Brexit will be 'like the Blitz', OECD chief tells UK | Brexit will be 'like the Blitz', OECD chief tells UK |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Britain should engage its “Blitz spirit” for the Brexit process and “stay calm and carry on” despite challenges ahead, a leading economist has said. | |
Angel Gurria, secretary general of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), said there was a “bumpy road ahead” but urged Britain to remember Winston Churchill and government efforts to raise morale during the Second World War. | |
It came as the influential organisation published an explosive report claiming a second referendum to reverse Brexit would give a “significant” boost to the UK economy – a suggestion that was promptly dismissed by Downing Street. | |
The OECD’s annual report, published today, projected economic growth of just 1 per cent in 2018 and said the uncertainty of Brexit negotiations was likely to scupper chances of a free trade deal with the EU by 2019. | |
Chancellor Philip Hammond refused to take any questions at the launch event but pointedly reaffirmed the UK’s commitment to Brexit. | Chancellor Philip Hammond refused to take any questions at the launch event but pointedly reaffirmed the UK’s commitment to Brexit. |
Mr Gurria, speaking at the launch, said: “[Brexit is] going to work, you are going to make it work. | |
“The only question is how long will it take? Are there costs attached? Yes there are, yes there will be.” | “The only question is how long will it take? Are there costs attached? Yes there are, yes there will be.” |
Referring to motivational posters created by the government during the war, the OECD boss said: “Stay the course. What was that thing Churchill said? Stay calm and carry on. | |
“This is like in the Blitz except fortunately, not the Blitz.” | “This is like in the Blitz except fortunately, not the Blitz.” |
Both sides should adopt a “whatever-it-takes” approach to the negotiations and the Brexit process should not be “wedded to any particular time frame”, Mr Gurria added. | |
He said European leaders were also keen to secure a good outcome from the talks and there was no need to rush the transition process. | He said European leaders were also keen to secure a good outcome from the talks and there was no need to rush the transition process. |
Mr Hammond, who has faced intense pressure from his own party over his gloomy Brexit stance, told the event: “The Government is clear that we are leaving the European Union and we want a deep and special partnership with the European Union, maintaining close economic ties after we leave the EU. | Mr Hammond, who has faced intense pressure from his own party over his gloomy Brexit stance, told the event: “The Government is clear that we are leaving the European Union and we want a deep and special partnership with the European Union, maintaining close economic ties after we leave the EU. |
“In doing so we know that by delivering a time-limited transition deal – avoiding an obstructive cliff-edge exit from the EU – we can provide greater certainty for businesses up and down the UK and across the European Union.” | |
Pro-EU groups and MPs seized on the OECD report, with Labour MP Wes Streeting claiming the findings were the “final nail in the coffin for the already long-buried notion that Brexit will benefit our economy”. | Pro-EU groups and MPs seized on the OECD report, with Labour MP Wes Streeting claiming the findings were the “final nail in the coffin for the already long-buried notion that Brexit will benefit our economy”. |
Liberal Democrat deputy leader Jo Swinson said the case for reversing Brexit was “getting stronger by the day” and called for the public to have a say on the final deal. | |
She said: “Brexit has already caused the UK to slip from top to bottom of the international growth league for major economies. | She said: “Brexit has already caused the UK to slip from top to bottom of the international growth league for major economies. |
“This will only get worse if the Government succeeds in dragging us out of the single market and customs union, or we end up crashing out of Europe without a deal.” | |
The analysis suggests a no-deal Brexit would wipe up to £40bn off UK economic growth by 2019. | |
A government spokesperson dismissed any suggestion of a further Brexit vote, saying: “We are leaving the EU and there will not be a second referendum.” |