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ECB ready for contingencies following UK referendum, Mario Draghi tells MEPs
Mr Draghi declined to speculate on a possible outcome of the vote, but admitted that "it is difficult to foresee the various dimensions of the vote on the markets and the euro area economies.” View Article |
IMF: Uncertainty clouds the United Kingdom’s economic prospects
The economy of the UK has performed well in recent years, but it faces important challenges and risks, according to the IMF’s annual health check of Britain's economy and its periodic report on the financial sector. An exit from the EU would likely entail substantial economic, financial costs. View Article |
Remarks by J.Dijsselbloem following the Eurogroup meeting
The Eurogroup's president spoke about Brexit, the IMF's article IV review of the euro zone and pension reforms. View Article |
OECD: The UK’s heart is wobbling but there are good reasons to Remain in the Union
The sizeable doubts that have emerged about staying in the EU suggest that the UK may be prone to a mid-life crisis. Yet there is strong evidence that EU membership has magnified the underlying strengths of the UK economy and that it can deliver more benefits in the future. View Article |
George Soros: The Brexit crash will make all of you poorer – be warned
My 60 years of experience tells me the pound will plummet, along with your living standards. The only winners will be speculators, writes the business magnate in The Guardian. View Article |
British Influence: Brexit - the Irish Dimension
The report examines the potential economic and political implications of Brexit for Northern Ireland, Ireland and Anglo-Irish relations. View Article |
British Influence: Brexit - the Commonwealth Dimension
The report demonstrates just how wrong Leave's campaign contention over placing the Commonwealth as the UK’s chief lever of influence in the world is, not only due to the economic and geopolitical pitfalls, but ultimately because the nations of the Commonwealth want the UK to remain in the EU. View Article |
David Cameron: An abject, self-imposed humiliation awaits if this proud, important country walks away
The British PM urges people not to vote to leave the EU in the upcoming referendum if they are not 100% sure of their vote because a negative vote is "irreversible", and lists the essential issues that are at stake. View Article |
POLITICO: How Europe will break on Brexit
A country-by-country look at what’s at stake elsewhere in Europe after Britain’s referendum. View Article |
Donald Tusk: "the UK outside the EU will be distinctly weaker"
Remarks by President Donald Tusk following his meeting in Helsinki with Prime Minister of Finland Juha Sipilä, in which he focused on Brexit, the continuing global economic challenges and the refugee crisis, among other issues. View Article |
Financial Times: Brexit would end City’s dominance of euro trading
A British vote to exit the EU this week would spell the end of the City of London’s dominance in euro trading, the chief executive of pan-European exchange Euronext has warned. View Article |
BBC: More than 1,280 business leaders sign letter against Brexit
More than 1,280 executives, including directors from 51 FTSE 100 companies, have signed a letter backing the UK's membership of the EU (Graham Bishop was a signatory). View Article |
The Guardian view on the economics of Brexit: running wild risks is not British
Economists are agreed, as they never were on the euro, that quitting the EU will make Britain poorer. How strange, in an economically conservative country, that many are refusing to listen. View Article |
VoxEU: The pound and the macroeconomic effects of Brexit
A depreciation of the pound following a vote to leave the EU could well generate an export boom, but this would not compensate for the damage to UK's internal demand and to its ability to access external financing of its deficits. This would put the UK's low-risk status in jeopardy. View Article |
VoxEU: Brexit - The potential for a financial catastrophe and long-term consequences for the UK financial sector
This column, which reports the views of panel members in the monthly Centre for Macroeconomics survey, finds that almost all think that a vote for Brexit would lead to a significant disruption to financial markets and asset prices for several months, putting the Bank of England on high alert. View Article |
EUROPP: The EU referendum has already hit the UK economy – here’s how it could recover after a remain vote
If the UK votes to stay in the EU it would be far from a given that uncertainty caused by the UK’s EU referendum would disappear and a strong response from the government will be necessary to generate a quick recovery. View Article |
EurActiv: Work for a better EU as you see it, or suffer a worse one
A Brexit with hopes for a Norway-inspired EU relationship would in fact leave Britain with a true democratic deficit and, certainly from a UK perspective, a far less attractive EU to deal with, writes Jonas Helseth. View Article |
Speech by the President of the Eurogroup, Jeroen Dijsselbloem
Dijsselbloem focused on the eurozone's economic outlook, completing the Banking Union, a Capital Markets Union and the UK referendum. View Article |