Ex-Bank of England forecaster: Brexit predictions from economists aren't 'lunatic'
The former Bank of England interest rate setter has also aligned himself with prominent economic institutions by predicting a squeeze on pay and spending next year as inflation bites.
Pro-Brexit papers such as the Daily Mail and Daily Express and politicians, such as former education secretary Michael Gove and leading Tory backbencher Jacob Rees-Mogg, have all heavily criticised economists in recent weeks for what they see as overly pessimistic Brexit forecasts both before and since the vote.
Almost all banks and economic think tanks predicted a recession if Britain voted for Brexit ahead of the June 23 vote. But most backtracked on the forecasts after the shock vote.
Gove said the profession is in "crisis" and Rees-Mogg, who sits on the Treasury Select Committee, said some of the borrowing assumptions made by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) in its audit of last week's Autumn Statement are "lunatic."
The Daily Mail on Friday also attacked the Institute of Fiscal Studies for predicting the longest period of wage stagnation in 70 years due to rising inflation.
Friday's Daily Mail:
Who are they trying to kid?#tomorrowspaperstoday #bbcpapers pic.twitter.com/rzrPUrnzmk
- Nick Sutton (@suttonnick) November 24, 2016
Martin Weale told the BBC in an interview on Tuesday: "I think describing forecasts as lunatic really doesn't help anyone at all."
"Forecasting is uncertain, that's the nature of things, forecasts aren't wrong or right, they are simply the best you can do."
Weale told the BBC: "Economists don't produce a collective view. People agree on some things and disagree on other things."
He added that economists "carry out a review of their forecasting errors and look at them to try and understand what can be learned from them."
He said Gove was setting up a "straw man to knock down in order to justify his own position."
Weale also aligned himself with current Bank of England, Treasury, and OBR forecasts, predicting a "squeeze" on pay and a slowdown in consumer spending as inflation accelerates due to the weak pound.
You can read the full BBC interview here.
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