According to The Telegraph, UK GDP growth is now expected to slow to 1.3pc in 2017, some
0.9 percentage points below what the IMF’s had previously forecasted. With the
exception of Nigeria, the UK’s 2017 growth forecast received the sharpest
downgrade of any of the 16 economies assessed by the IMF.
Maury Obstfeld, the IMF’s chief economist, said that the
UK’s decision to withdraw from the EU had added “downward pressure to the world economy at a time when growth has been
slow”.
He said that “the
direct effects specifically due to Brexit are greatest in Europe, especially
the UK”.
Despite the downgrade, economic growth in Britain will still
outstrip Germany and France, whose economies are expected to expand by 1.2pc
next year.
The UK will also beat Italy, where GDP is forecast to rise just 1pc.
The figures were part of a wider IMF report on the global
economy. The fund’s economists said the result of the EU referendum would
contribute to slower global growth both this year and next.
Economists now
anticipate world GDP growth of 3.1pc this year, and 3.4pc in 2017, having
shaved 0.1 percentage points off both estimates.
Mr Obstfeld suggested that global growth had begun to turn a
corner, with “some promising signs”
in the first half of 2016. However, he concluded that “Brexit has thrown a spanner in the works”, threatening to undo
much of this progress.
Mr Obstfeld said that the impact of Britain leaving the EU
would not be limited to a couple of years, and that it would “play out gradually over time”.
The fund’s growth projections were based on there being no
major trade barriers erected between the EU and the UK after Britain leaves the
bloc.
They also assume there will be no serious financial disruption, with, at
most, limited political fallout. If the outcome is less optimistic, then the UK
could fall into recession, the IMF said.
A spokesman for the Treasury said: “The decision to leave the EU marks a new phase for the British economy”.
“Our absolute priority
is to send a clear signal to businesses both here and across the world, that we
are open for business and determined to keep Britain an attractive destination
for investors from overseas.”
culleed from bmmargazine.co.uk
Photo: gettyimages
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