Brace yourself for the new recession, says economist

Last Updated: June 25, 2016By
The FTSE 100 tumbled after it became clear 'Leave' would win the referendum - and has only recovered slightly. Further shocks may follow.

The FTSE 100 tumbled after it became clear ‘Leave’ would win the referendum – and has only recovered slightly. Further shocks may follow.

Richard Murphy, of Tax Research UK, wrote what follows a week before the result of the EU referendum was known – and predicted recession, with markets and the pound plummeting.

He assumed there would be another renegotiation of our EU membership (there won’t be, according to Mr Juncker) and he also assumed that both David Cameron and George Osborne would be out of a job by the weekend (only Cameron has gone at the time of writing) and any Tory administration that followed would be a ‘lame duck’. In those circumstances:

Recession is unavoidable. Investment in the UK will go on hold during renegotiation. No big business is going to sink millions or even billions into our economy without knowing what the future terms of UK trade might be. In itself this will be enough to trigger recession. Couple that with a planned withdrawal of certain parts of banking (those that need an EU regulatory base) from London and a downturn has to happen. Try as I might I cannot see where the stimulus happens. A sterling fall of 30% in recent years has not boosted UK growth so no one should respond by saying a fall in sterling us the counter-balance to all this. That will only create import induced cost push inflation, which is just about the last sort we want as it serves no domestic purpose at all.

Then, leaving aside the real risk of EU instability as a result of our vote, there is the risk of worldwide recession as global markets suffer the knock on effects of a fall in confidence in a global trading hub. This could be bad enough to make 2008 look like a picnic: that was about finance and this time the threat is to the real terms of trade, and that is much more serious.

The Labour Party would not be keen to seize power at such a time, he argues:

Do not expect Labour to want to take office, I believe they will be happy for blue-on-blue action to continue and  for the mess  to arises on someone else’s watch. The chance to say after 2020 that what they will have to do is clear up the mess they inherited, with a real justification for attributing blame in this  case, will be much too big to resist, in my opinion.

To be honest, I don’t see Labour opting out of office at any time, because the risk posed by any Conservative Government is too great.

Besides, isn’t there enough of a mess already? We’ve had the slowest (and worst) economic recovery since records began, coupled with a ‘vanity’ referendum that has caused upheaval in the value of the pound and the markets and is likely to cause the collapse of the UK as a nation made up of four countries.

Is it possible for David Cameron to have failed more utterly?

There is one sticking-point, as far as Labour is concerned, if Mr Murphy is correct:

The narrative of failure of neoliberalism has to be broadly agreed to challenge the backlash based in ingrained thinking that is still possible.

We know that there are still plenty of neoliberals in the Parliamentary Labour Party who would seek to blindly carry on following that failed philosophy if returned to office – two of them have tabled a vote of ‘no confidence’ in leader Jeremy Corbyn (very much not a neoliberal).

Mr Corbyn has rejected the call to quit, but he’ll need to clear his party of these backstabbers and bring in people who aren’t wedded to a failed and corrupt economic theory before he can hope to institute change for the better in our divided and damaged country.

Source: Tax Research UK » What will happen to the politics of the UK post Brexit?

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5 Comments

  1. Florence June 25, 2016 at 3:01 pm - Reply

    It’s time Corbyn purged Sainsbury, the arch Neo Liberals and his money – Progress – from the party. He enjoys a massive mandate and it’s now getting just boring for the media, so the Blairites will get less attention the more they keep on doing this – they are in a lose-lose spiral, but somehow just can’t stop it. let’s get them out in time for an October election.

  2. hayfords June 25, 2016 at 3:03 pm - Reply

    Interestingly, the FTSE100 ended the week exactly where it was the previous Friday.

    • Mike Sivier June 27, 2016 at 8:09 pm - Reply

      A pre-shock. The real disaster is yet to come.

  3. mohandeer June 25, 2016 at 3:45 pm - Reply

    Good article Mike, have already shared Richard’s blog and now yours.
    Don’t know if you have already seen this:
    http://jackofkent.com/2016/06/why-the-article-50-notification-is-important/
    Personally, I would just as soon delay the article 50 until Cameron leaves in November, to give opportunity for a second referendum when people realise Brexit is not the deal they thought it would be.

  4. NMac June 26, 2016 at 8:51 am - Reply

    And this is only “Day 2”. I could weep with despair at this nasty weak and incompetent government led by, in the words of President Obama, “A political lightweight.”

    The so called referendum was unnecessary and called by a weak prime minister to try to settle the Tory civil war. I know from canvassing I did that many people saw it as an opportunity to kick Cameron and the Tories.

    We are now in a real Tory mess, with only the prospect of hard-line right wing Tory politicians, who lack humanity and feeling for fellow humans, and will make Cameron look like a moderate.

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