Brexiteers can be forgiven for indulging in a little ‘schadenfreude’ at the news that the EU has agreed the principles of a trade deal with the US on worse terms than the UK was able to achieve. Nonetheless, there are very few winners here. For a start, a final agreement is still some way off. … Continue reading US-EU trade ‘deal’ avoids an even worse outcome, but this is still little to cheer
Category: Brexit
Does the UK’s weak growth in GDP per head really “lay bare the full costs of Brexit”?
Many people have asked me about this chart, which appeared in David Smith’s regular (and usually excellent) column in the Sunday Times this weekend. The chart shows that GDP per head has grown much faster since 2016 in the euro area than it has in the UK – ‘nearly three times as fast’, according to … Continue reading Does the UK’s weak growth in GDP per head really “lay bare the full costs of Brexit”?
What to make of Trump’s tariffs?
Here are the slides from a presentation I gave today to sixth form students at a school in Reading. It features a discussion of the pros and (mostly) cons of the new US tariffs policy and concludes with a recommended book and a film for budding economists! What to make of Trump's tariffs (9 May … Continue reading What to make of Trump’s tariffs?
Trump’s ‘reciprocal tariffs’ make no economic sense
The Trump administration’s decision to impose additional tariffs on imports into the US is bad economics, motivated at least in part by bad politics. TTo recap, the new “reciprocal tariffs” will be set according to the 2024 figures for US trade in goods - completely ignoring trade in services. They are based on a formula … Continue reading Trump’s ‘reciprocal tariffs’ make no economic sense
