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Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages (Read 415 times)
Unforgiven
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Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Oct 13th, 2016 at 10:14am
 
Chaos reigns supreme as the king of the Brexit clowns Boris Johnson cavorts in the foreign policy arena.

The pound is down and falling.

Its looking really bad with claims that UK's lowest paid workers will lose 800 pound a year off their wages.

UK will rue its decision as the punishment mounts.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-latest-wages-salaries-uk-eu...

Quote:
Brexit could knock almost £800 off annual wage of UK's poorest workers, report finds
The Resolution Foundation concludes low-paid workers could be hit due to a weaker wage-growth outlook after the Brexit vote

The hourly National Living Wage could be lower than forecast due to weak wage growth
Brexit could knock almost £800 off the annual wage of the country’s lowest-paid workers by the end of the decade, a major new report has found.

The research concluded that an uncertain economic outlook in the wake of the UK’s European Union referendum could drive down average pay growth, with a direct effect on how the minimum wage is set.

It comes after Treasury papers showed Britain could lose up to £66bn a year if it pursues the hard Brexit option – leaving the single market and EU customs union.

'Hard Brexit' could cost up to £66bn and slash UK GDP by almost 10%
Theresa May’s Conservative conference speech signalling the UK will prioritise immigration over single market access in Brexit talks also sent confidence in pound sterling tumbling last week.

While the longer-term economic impacts of Brexit are yet to unfold, today’s report from the Resolution Foundation think-tank suggests the lowest paid could be hardest hit.

In April this year the Government’s new £7.20-per-hour National Living Wage (NLW), announced by ex-Chancellor George Osborne, replaced the minimum wage for people over 25.

From now on the rate is set based on median earnings, with the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) predicting in March that the NLW would hit £7.60 per hour in 2017.

Chancellor Philip Hammond should confirm next year’s rate in the Autumn Statement next month, but today’s Resolution Foundation report predicts it will be 10p lower that the OBR thought due to weaker wage growth – meaning £200 a year less for the lowest paid in 2017.

How the pound has struggled since Brexit
By 2020 the think-tank says faltering pay-growth means the NLW may only reach £8.60 instead of the Government’s original £9 pledge, wiping a full £780 off annual wages.

Resolution Foundation Policy analyst Conor D’Arcy said: “While there is much uncertainty over Britain’s long-term economic outlook, most economists agree that wage growth in the next few years is likely to be weaker than expected prior to the referendum. That means we’re unlikely to see the £9 National Living Wage that George Osborne talked about in this parliament.”

What experts have said about Brexit

He said it is “sensible” that NLW, expected to lift more than 800,000 workers out of low pay by 2020, rises in line with wages of typical workers.

But the report’s findings add to concerns over the future impact of Brexit, and in particular a hard Brexit.

Liberal Democrat Leader Tim Farron said Brexit was creating “Breadline Britain” by hitting the poorest hardest.

UK: Theresa May lays out post-Brexit plan at party conference
He added: “Brexit was supposed to be about taking back control when actually it seems it is just taking out of the pockets of the people who can least afford it.”

A Government paper leaked to The Times this week suggested the UK’s gross domestic product could fall by as much as 9.5 per cent if it leaves the EU and reverts to World Trade Organisation rules – something suggested by some pro-Brexit MPs.

The document said: “The net impact on public sector receipts – assuming no contributions to the EU and current receipts from the EU are replicated in full –would be a loss of between £38 billion and £66 billion per year after 15 years, driven by the smaller size of the economy.”

The draft Cabinet committee paper is based on a controversial study published by George Osborne in April during the referendum campaign. But despite the vilification it received then, the Treasury says it still stands by the figures now.

Pound sterling fell to its lowest level against the dollar since the beginning of July following Ms May’s conference speech, in which she gave clear signals that the UK was heading for a hard Brexit.

In the House of Commons earlier on Monday Brexit Secretary David Davis also indicated that the UK could withdraw from full single market membership and the EU customs union.

The Government has said it will pursue “the best outcome for Britain” consisting of a “bespoke arrangement which gives British companies the maximum freedom to trade with and operate in the single market, and enables us to decide for ourselves how we control immigration.”
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bogarde73
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Re: Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Reply #1 - Oct 13th, 2016 at 2:41pm
 
Unforgivable is salivating like a rabid dog at the prospect of 60 million closet poms being on the breadline?

Don't waste your saliva my friend. It's not going to happen.
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red baron
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Re: Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Reply #2 - Oct 13th, 2016 at 2:56pm
 
Lot of people around thinking Britain can't get by without Europe. Britain has survived very nicely thanks very much for thousands of years.

Can't see it going under any time soon.

I think the European Union is a dog's breakfast and it is bleeding like a stuck pig with all those useless nations who produce nothing but people with their hands out sucking it dry.

It will go under eventually.
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Lionel Edriess
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Re: Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Reply #3 - Oct 13th, 2016 at 3:12pm
 

£800 a year to lock the gate and govern your own country?

Seems cheap.

Whether it's enough to cover the damage already wreaked is another question.

The Lion is merely recovering it's breath.

More to come on this issue.

Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

Cool

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Toughen up, Australia!
 
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Unforgiven
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Re: Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Reply #4 - Oct 13th, 2016 at 4:54pm
 
bogarde73 wrote on Oct 13th, 2016 at 2:41pm:
Unforgivable is salivating like a rabid dog at the prospect of 60 million closet poms being on the breadline?

Don't waste your saliva my friend. It's not going to happen.


The poms in England are not closet poms. Poms who don't deny their pomminess are not closet poms.

Closet poms are UK born or UK ancestry persons claiming themselves to be of nationality other than UK.
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Unforgiven
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Re: Breadline Britain Brexit: -10% GDP, 800 off wages
Reply #5 - Oct 13th, 2016 at 6:20pm
 
In 12 months GBP has lost ~ 22% against USD and about 26% against A$.
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