**Brexit’s £140 Billion Price Tag: A Decade of Damage to the UK Economy**

Brexit’s £140 Billion Price Tag: A Decade of Damage to the UK Economy

Ten years after the 2016 referendum, the economic reality of Brexit has become starkly clear. The decision to leave the European Union has not unlocked a new era of global trade.

Patrick Boyle · · 3 min read ·

Ten years after the 2016 referendum, the economic reality of Brexit has become starkly clear. The decision to leave the European Union has not unlocked a new era of global trade. Instead, it has imposed a persistent, structural drag on the British economy—a drag that now costs the nation approximately £140 billion per year.

This figure is not an estimate from a single political think tank. It represents a consensus among leading economic institutions, including the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), the London School of Economics (LSE), and Bloomberg Economics. Their models all point to the same conclusion: Brexit has reduced the UK’s long-term GDP potential by between 4% and 6%.

The Core Mechanism: Barriers to Trade

The primary driver of this economic loss is not a single event, but a fundamental change in the UK’s trading relationship with its largest market. Prior to 2021, the UK enjoyed frictionless access to the EU single market. Today, it operates under a Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) that, while tariff-free on goods, is heavy on non-tariff barriers.

These barriers are invisible to most consumers but devastating to businesses. They include new customs declarations, sanitary and phytosanitary checks for food products, and rules of origin requirements that prove a product was actually made in the UK. These are not minor inconveniences; they are significant costs.

The LSE Centre for Economic Performance has calculated that these new trade barriers have reduced UK goods trade with the EU by roughly 30%. This is not a temporary shock from which the economy has recovered. It is a permanent reduction in trade intensity—a structural change that acts as a tax on commerce.

Investment Stagnation

The impact of Brexit extends beyond trade flows. It has also severely damaged business investment. Uncertainty about the future relationship, combined with the loss of passporting rights for financial services and the end of free movement of labor, made the UK a less attractive destination for capital.

Data from the ONS shows that business investment in the UK has been essentially flat since the referendum, while it has grown significantly in comparable OECD economies. The OBR estimates that Brexit has reduced business investment by roughly 23%. This lack of investment means lower productivity, which in turn means lower wages and slower economic growth.

The Broken Promises of "Global Britain"

Proponents of Brexit argued that leaving the EU would allow the UK to strike superior trade deals with faster-growing economies around the world. This has not materialized. The UK has signed trade deals with Australia and New Zealand, but the economic impact of these agreements is minimal. The government’s own impact assessments found that the deal with Australia would add only 0.08% to GDP over 15 years.

Meanwhile, the UK has lost access to the EU’s network of 70+ trade deals. While many of these have been rolled over, the terms are often less favorable than those the UK previously enjoyed as an EU member.

The Wage Impact

The most direct consequence for ordinary citizens is on their paychecks. Economists at the Centre for European Reform estimate that Brexit has already reduced UK wages by roughly 3% compared to where they would have been. This is because lower trade and investment lead to lower productivity, and productivity is the fundamental driver of wages.

Conclusion: A Self-Inflicted Wound

A decade on, the evidence is overwhelming. Brexit has not made Britain richer or more dynamic. It has made the economy smaller, less open, and less productive. The £140 billion annual cost is not a one-time loss; it is a recurring structural deficit that will compound over time.

The UK is now poorer than it would have been. The promise of sovereignty has been delivered, but the economic price has been far higher than most voters were led to believe.

Related Coverage

Related Editorials

▶ Watch the original video on YouTube