Quite. Remember what happened to the value of the pound?
https://www.exchangerates.org.uk/brexit-pound-exchange-rate-tracker
Quite. Remember what happened to the value of the pound?
You must be a glutton for punishment.Happy for any examples.
You must be a glutton for punishment.
One out of six predictions correct. Four predictions not merely wrong, but in the opposite direction to what has actually occurred. Mystic Meg could have done better, and a simple coin flip would do better too.
- Immediate four quarters of recession. Completely wrong.
- 500,000 rise in unemployment. Completely wrong.
- Falling pound. Correct.
- GDP 3.6% lower. Completely wrong.
- House prices to fall between 10% and 18% in the two years following the referendum. Completely wrong.
- Interest rates to rise. Completely wrong.
I'm willing to keep a similar tally of the accuracy of their predictions of what will happen once we've actually left. I guess we need to wait until at least mid-2021 before I can do that though, as we won't leave the transition period until, at the earliest, the end of 2020.
Evidence?
Evidence?
You must be a glutton for punishment.
One out of six predictions correct. Four predictions not merely wrong, but in the opposite direction to what has actually occurred. Mystic Meg could have done better, and a simple coin flip would do better too.
- Immediate four quarters of recession. Completely wrong.
- 500,000 rise in unemployment. Completely wrong.
- Falling pound. Correct.
- GDP 3.6% lower. Completely wrong.
- House prices to fall between 10% and 18% in the two years following the referendum. Completely wrong.
- Interest rates to rise. Completely wrong.
I'm willing to keep a similar tally of the accuracy of their predictions of what will happen once we've actually left. I guess we need to wait until at least mid-2021 before I can do that though, as we won't leave the transition period until, at the earliest, the end of 2020.
Two years after a vote to leave the EU, GDP would be around 3.6% lower in the shock scenario than following a vote to remain
As a result, the Bank now calculates the total level of GDP is about 1.2% lower than it had expected three years ago
If you read the whole thing you will know from section 2 that the predictions were compared to a remain vote. It is what would have happened following a leave vote if we carried on with the economic policies we were following. After the vote those policies were amended and the government poured money into the economy to try to get stability. That would not have happened on a remain vote.For a good laugh you should read the whole thing - that will give you a taste of the totally wrong predictions of what will happen after the transition period.
But for the 'immediate effect of a vote to leave' forecasts, you can skip to Section 3, starting at page 45.
.
To avoid any misinterpretation about the highlighted part, the forecast was:
https://assets.publishing.service.g...ate_economic_impact_of_leaving_the_eu_web.pdf
....and not that GDP would be 3.6% lower than it was prior to the Leave vote.
What has happened ?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47168866
....and that despite the Quantitative Easing, abandoning Austerity and the decision to keep interest rates low, all of which were designed to counter the effects of the Brexit vote.
Evidence?
Employment and Housing prices were also relative to what would happen if remain had won, so it’s not immediately clear that either of these were wrong.
I’m not sure what the justification for calling for both a recession and higher interest rates. The normal central bank response to recession would be lower interest rates. If there are tariffs on imports from the EU post Brexit maybe this could result in a bout of inflation as well as an economic downturn, in which case the BoE probably attacks the inflation first and raises interest rates. This would be follow Brexit itself, not just the referendum though.
Per my post I can see a possibility of that after a no deal Brexit, but even then it’s dependant on policy. I can’t see a the referendum itself causing stagflation.I think that the bank was predicting a period of "stagflation".
A drop in currency value can provide a big economic boost, so it’s still an either or situation.The drop in the value of the pound and other factors would trigger a significant rise in inflation which.
Stagflation is a fairly unique situation and I remain unconvinced you can get there just with reaction to the referendum. Assuming the UK doesn’t intact a lot of import tariffs I don’t think Stagflation is likely. Instead I expect a relatively normal looking recession and slow economic growth with continued risk of deflation.The combination of a stagnant, or even recessionary, economy and high inflation would see a return to the economic conditions of the mid-70s which ended up with the highlighted results, recession and high interest rates.
If the inflationary pressures are external, a sudden rise in commodity prices and/or a precipitous drop in the value of sterling leading to more expensive imports then it's "bad"
Per my post I can see a possibility of that after a no deal Brexit, but even then it’s dependant on policy. I can’t see a the referendum itself causing stagflation.
A drop in currency value can provide a big economic boost, so it’s still an either or situation.
Stagflation is a fairly unique situation and I remain unconvinced you can get there just with reaction to the referendum. Assuming the UK doesn’t intact a lot of import tariffs I don’t think Stagflation is likely. Instead I expect a relatively normal looking recession and slow economic growth with continued risk of deflation.
This is only applies if the imports are things that people can’t do without when the price is going up.
The UK economy is a service economy where the primary driver is consumer spending. A significant reduction in consumer confidence would take care of the "stag" part of the equation.
For sure it can, but the UK has a significantly negative balance of payments so it would tend to be inflationary whilst uncertainty over the future has constrained demand for UK goods and services.
The UK has had an increase in inflation (from very low to quite low) and a drop in growth, though not a technical recession. Had it not been for Quantitative Easing and an abandonment of Austerity, we could easily have slipped into recession.
Given that the UK imports half of its food, most of its energy and almost all of its consumer electronics, I think that's a given.
,You must be a glutton for punishment.
<drivel snip>
It's as much as your rubbish needs or deserves.Rolleyes smiley is not an argument.
Got to give it to them, the brexiteers always manage to put their smarter folk forward for media interviews.A Brexiter from Stevenage called LBC radio Matt Stadlen show.
Apparently she goes to France every year with husband and afterAfter Jan 31 they won't be driving on the "wrong side of the road" when they go over as "EU rules wouldn't apply to English people" anymore.
A Brexiter from Stevenage called LBC radio Matt Stadlen show.
Apparently she goes to France every year with husband and afterAfter Jan 31 they won't be driving on the "wrong side of the road" when they go over as "EU rules wouldn't apply to English people" anymore.
Gotta be a spoof, surely? Yes? Please tell me so.
Ah the Brexiteer connection to reality...A Brexiter from Stevenage called LBC radio Matt Stadlen show.
Apparently she goes to France every year with husband and afterAfter Jan 31 they won't be driving on the "wrong side of the road" when they go over as "EU rules wouldn't apply to English people" anymore.