I talked
last week about how the Leave campaign involved lies at its centre.
Not the occasional exaggerations of the Remain campaign, but claiming things that were the opposite of the truth. Like there will be more
money for the NHS, when in fact there will be less. That particular
lie probably swung the result, according
to the man who organised the Leave campaign.
Labour people tell
me that public opinion on Brexit will turn once these lies become
apparent, and at that point Labour can safely take up the Remain
cause. What this overlooks is that the managing of information
characterised by the Brexit campaign continues. The Tory tabloids
continue to distort the truth, and the Telegraph acts in a very
similar fashion.
The UK government appears more interested in saying stuff to please
its UK audience than actually negotiating with the EU, and its
studies of the impact
of Brexit remain secret [1].
Meanwhile the opposition give no hint of the costs that Brexit will involve, and by
design
or conflicted confusion are just a tiny bit less pro-Brexit than the
government. The broadcast media, and particularly the BBC, appear
hopeless at questioning the facade that both main parties and
supporting think tanks have erected. I have never heard a politician
pulled up for saying we must retain access to the Single Market: all
countries have access to that market! (This
is the kind of journalism we should be seeing.) Individual MPs are
intimidated
into silence by the power of the Tory tabloids.
When I talk to Leave
voters, all they tell me is how the economic ‘catastrophe’
predicted by Remain did not come to pass, or other Leave nonsense
talking points like the exchange rate was overvalued anyway. They are
often unaware that falling real wages are the direct result of the
Brexit depreciation, and as a result the economy hardly grew in the
first half of this year. They, and many people who voted Remain, do
not realise that the government’s position papers are largely
fantasy and that the EU is in a position to dictate
terms. This is not because these voters minds are closed. They just
get their information from sources that go along with the
government’s Brexit fantasy, unless they are fortunate enough to
read the Financial Times. No wonder there has been no major
change in public opinion since the referendum.
Those in the Labour
party should realise more than most how the media can present a
one-sided reality which many non-political voters accept,
until they see for themselves the other side during a general
election campaign. The problem with a ‘wait and see’ attitude to
Brexit is that its major economic cost will not become apparent until
years after we actually leave the Single Market. Few realise that the
original Treasury study, with the central estimate of an average
annual cost of £4,300 per household (6.2% of GDP) was not some piece
of Remain spin but a perfectly reputable study, which economists at
the LSE said
was “overly cautious”. Instead we get nonsense like this
reported by the BBC. [2]
Some time ago I calculated a conservative estimate for the cost of
austerity, and it was £4,000 per household. Ironically it was based
on OBR estimates that the MSM largely ignored, just as they ignore
the OBR’s estimates for the short term cost of Brexit. But my
austerity cost estimate was a total cost, over all the years of
austerity. The Treasury estimate is a cost each year. There is
therefore a strong liklihood that Brexit will be far far worse than
austerity in terms of lost resources, and unlike austerity there is
no way of avoiding these costs once we are outside the Single Market.
For Labour party members and MPs I would put it this way. Imagine
winning the next election but having to accept continuing austerity.
Winning an election after leaving the Single Market will probably be
much worse, and of course the media and voters will blame it all not
on Brexit but on Labour’s ‘far left’ policies. Winning an
election after Brexit is a poisoned chalice.
[1] Here
is Mike Galsworthy on this and the earlier 'Balance of Competences'
reviews that the government kept very quiet about before and during the
referendum.
[2] I’ve talked to
people at the BBC, including their economics editor, about why they
cannot apply the BBC Trust’s recommendations
on science coverage to economics. (The Trust’s conclusion, in
summary, is that in controversial areas the BBC should go with the
overwhelming scientific consensus. In other words recognise
scientific knowledge, and not treat it as just an opinion.) I think a
summary of their response to my question is that economics should not
be regarded as a science: there is no economic knowledge, just opinions. What that attitude means in practice is
that the public do not hear from the many experts in international
trade we have in the UK (and there are many), but instead they hear
from Patrick Minford.

