Luxembourg, Ireland, Netherlands set for Brexit hit, says OECD

epa05340353 Ministers and delegations gather around OECD Secretary-General Jose Angel Gurria (C) for the Meeting of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Council at Ministerial Level at the organization headquarter in Paris, France, 01 June 2016. OECD Week places a central emphasis on the need for policies that strengthen productivity, and promote inclusive and sustainable growth.  EPA/ETIENNE LAURENT

 

Berlin / AFP

Ireland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands would be the first of Britain’s EU partners to bear the brunt if voters back an exit from the European Union, the OECD said on Wednesday.
Britain itself could be buffeted by financial market turbulence akin to that seen at the height of the eurozone crisis in 2011 and 2012, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) warned.
In a heated build-up to the British referendum on June 23, economists, businesses, politicians and world leaders have issued myriad warnings on the likely impact of a so-called Brexit.
As part of its twice-yearly economic outlook, the Paris-based OECD became the latest, highlighting the possible effect on Britain’s European peers from the uncertainty unleashed by it quitting the bloc.
“The resulting uncertainty would lead to more difficult financial conditions in other European countries.”
EU members Ireland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands are “relatively highly exposed” to the British economy, as measured by three criteria, the OECD said.
They include British imports of goods and services from each country as a share of that country’s gross domestic product in 2014, as well as investment in Britain and interest reflected through online Brexit searches, the OECD report said.
Eurozone heavyweights Germany, France and Spain are among nine other EU countries that are “moderately exposed” to the British economy on all three counts, it added.
A vote by Britons to leave the EU could “heighten uncertainty, reduce confidence and result in a series of financial market shocks” in Britain and elsewhere in Europe, the OECD said.
“In the UK, financial market shocks are assumed to be of a magnitude similar to those observed during the acute phase of the euro area crisis in 2011-12, but much smaller than during the financial crisis in 2008-09.”

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