Larry Elliott 

Brexit fears weighing down UK manufacturing? Dream on

George Osborne will no doubt blame bad economic news on the EU referendum but the crisis in British factories is chronic and part of a global trend
  
  

An engine turbine in production
UK manufacturing has suffered its worst month in three years. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty

For the next couple of months – and probably longer – George Osborne has a ready-made excuse if the economic numbers look a bit grim: blame it on the uncertainty caused by the EU referendum.

The weakest report on manufacturing from purchasing managers for three years? That would be the result of Brexit fears. A downgrade of the UK’s growth forecast for 2016 from the European commission? Investment plans are being mothballed until businesses see the way Britain has voted on 23 June.

But hang on a minute. The outlook for manufacturing has also softened in the US, which the last time anybody looked was not a member of the EU. Likewise, it is hard to see what Brexit has to do with the continuing travails of China’s industrial sector.

The reality is that manufacturing has been suffering around the world as part of a broad economic slowdown that has been going on for at least a year. It certainly predates the moment in late February when David Cameron announced the referendum date.

It would be wrong to think that speculation about Brexit will have no impact, but the impact needs to be put into perspective. Consumer confidence is reasonably strong by historical standards despite last month’s fall, which helps explain why sales of new cars remain strong. The housing market weakened a bit in April, but that had more to do with higher stamp duty for buy-to-let than it did the referendum.

Let’s see how the economy fares when the referendum is over. Assuming the opinion polls are right and the Remain side wins, the upshot should be a revitalised Britain where the trade deficit narrows from a record 7% of GDP, a decade-long hiatus in productivity growth comes to an end, and there is the long-promised rebalancing of growth towards investment and exports.

Dream on. These are chronic problems, not ones that have suddenly flared up since late February.

 

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