Claim: “Brexit has already reduced UK GDP by 6%”
Source: This figure also comes from the NBER working paper published in November 2025
Methodology: The 6% figure is based on firm-level data from the Bank of England’s Decision Maker Panel (DMP) survey. Any divergence in the performance of firms based on their pre-referendum exposure to the EU was assumed to be solely due to Brexit
Flaws: Several. The DMP is a relatively large survey, but the respondents are not necessarily representative of the UK economy as a whole. More importantly, divergences in the performance of individual firms depending on their exposure to the EU may simply be picking up the relative weakness of major European economies over this period (especially Germany), or other factors such as the impact of the UK’s relatively high energy costs on the competitiveness of goods which are mainly exported to the EU
Finally, while the prospect of an increase in trade frictions with the EU will clearly have had some negative effects, these should prove to be (mostly) temporary as Brexit uncertainty fades and firms adjust to the new trading arrangements.
Indeed, the DMP itself suggests that Brexit has dropped well down the list of concerns for most firms. Similarly, the latest Deloitte survey suggests that CFOs are now more worried about “economic weakness in the euro area and the possibility of a renewed euro crisis” than they are about the “effects of Brexit or a deterioration in UK-EU relations”.