Article (Journal/Review)
The costs and benefits of leaving the EU: trade effects
Fecha
2017-10Registro en:
0266-4658
10.1093/epolic/eix015
000412829800003
Autor
Dhingra, Swati
Huang, Hanwei
Ottaviano, Gianmarco
Pessoa, João Paulo
Sampson, Thomas
Van Reenen, John
Institución
Resumen
Sampson and John Van Reenen?> This paper estimates the welfare effects of Brexit in the medium to long run, focusing on trade and fiscal transfers. We use a standard quantitative general equilibrium trade model with many countries and sectors and trade in intermediates. We simulate a range of counterfactuals reflecting alternative options for European Union (EU)-United Kingdom (UK) relations following Brexit. Welfare losses for the average UK household are 1.3% if the UK remains in the EU's Single Market like Norway (a 'soft Brexit'). Losses rise to 2.7% if the UK trades with the EU under World Trade Organization rules (a 'hard Brexit'). A reduced-form approach that captures the dynamic effects of Brexit on productivity more than triples these losses and implies a decline in average income per capita of between 6.3% and 9.4%, partly via falls in foreign investment. The negative effects of Brexit are widely shared across the entire income distribution and are unlikely to be offset from new trade deals.