28/07/2016 - Scotland faces a sharp slowdown in growth and higher
unemployment over the next few years as a direct result of the Brexit vote, a
leading economic forecaster has warned.
The
University of Strathclyde's Fraser of Allander Institute said a prolonged
period of "economic uncertainty and financial volatility" was
unavoidable.
It warned
this would carry risks for investment, household incomes and jobs.
The
institute has revised down growth forecasts it made before the EU vote.
It now
expects growth of just 0.9% in 2016 (down by 0.5%), 0.5% in 2017 (down by
1.4%), and 0.7% in 2018 (down by 1.3%).
Its report
said that while growth was likely to remain positive on an annual basis, a
short "technical recession" - two consecutive quarters of falling
output - was "highly possible" within the next three years.
Unemployment
The Fraser
of Allander also forecast that Scotland's unemployment rate would rise to 6.5%
this year, 7% in 2017 and 6.8% in 2018. That compares with the
most recent official figure of 5.5%.
The
institute also argued trade and investment prospects would be damaged by the
decision to leave the EU.
It said it
expected growth to slow as businesses and investors adjusted.
The report
maintained that exiting the EU was "materially different" from the
financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, when "the global systemic effects of
the crisis were much larger".
But it
warned that the costs of the UK leaving the EU on Scotland's economy were
"likely to be structural and long-lasting, with any benefits at best still
undetermined and highly uncertain".
'Much
more pessimistic'
Fraser of
Allander Institute director Graeme Roy said: "Following the referendum
result we predict a significant slowing in the rate of growth in the Scottish
economy.
"The
combination of economic and policy uncertainty, coupled with the longer-term
structural consequences for trade and investment from leaving the EU, make the
outlook much more pessimistic than before.
"Given
Scotland's fragile economic performance over the past 18 months, the impact of
the EU referendum result is exactly what the Scottish economy did not need.
"The
top priority has to be retaining access to the single market which will help
mitigate some of the most damaging effects on investment, trade, productivity
and jobs.
"Whether
or not this can be achieved without freedom of movement is highly
uncertain."
A survey
conducted by the Fraser of Allander earlier this month found more than 60% of
Scottish firms believed Brexit would have a
"negative impact" on them.
However,
the institute said there was little evidence of companies cancelling investment
or recruitment outright.
Source: BBC
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