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Covid has been an easy scapegoat for economic disruption, but Brexit is biting | Anand Menon

12:28 AM

As the pandemic recedes, the negative impacts of Brexit will become clearer and its political effects more unpredictable

  • Anand Menon is director of the UK in a Changing Europe

It’s two years since the UK left the European Union, slightly more than one since it exited the single market and customs union. Yet, as one prominent Brexit supporter has pointed out, no one seems to have starved to death. A low bar, admittedly, but one takes what one can in these pandemic-ravaged times. However, while we may still have food on the shelves, Brexit has already begun to act as a drag on the UK economy. It seems clear this will persist, though it’s less clear as to what implications this will have for the ongoing Brexit debate.

Think back to the febrile atmosphere of the referendum and its aftermath. There was plenty of loose talk on all sides. Claims such as the £350m on the bus or George Osborne’s warning of the need for an emergency budget in the event of a vote to leave were generally overblown. And remainer rhetoric provided an opening for Brexiters. In response to 2017 warnings about a Brexit “cliff edge”, a spokesperson for the Welsh Conservative leader Andrew RT Davies remarked acidly that “according to project fear we should be holed up in a post-apocalyptic wasteland in threadbare clothes eating tinned food by now”.

Anand Menon is director of the UK in a Changing Europe and professor of European politics and foreign affairs at King’s College London

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from The Guardian https://ift.tt/I1PFpvBRh

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