As Rachel Reeves (finally) swings behind an explicit statement that Brexit has cost the UK around 8% of GDP, we might ask what that looks like:

It equals around £224bn a year (in 2025), which given the UK's tax burden of around 35% is £78bn in lost tax revenue a year.

So if you wondering why the public sector is under-funded, while a continuing austerity logic is always in play, this lost tax income for the state is also contributing to budget shortfalls.

#Brexit #politics
h/t Observer

@ChrisMayLA6

As we decided last week, I'm not an economist.
That said, I was pretty sure our economy would suffer as a direct result of Brexit, which is why I voted to stay.

As an aside: my boss and I talked about how we'd be voting in that referendum, and he went the wrong way, the business Has never been as prosperous as it was prr-brexit

He was the turkey that voted for Christmas.

@ArabellaLovejoy

as did many... Turkeys, that is