Evidence?
IMF, IFS, Treasury, Bank of England, OECD, World Bank, G7, LSE etc etc
Well it seems to be a figure you just made up.
Nope a number derived from the expert opinions of the world's most respected independent economic organisations - e.g. IMF, IFS, Treasury, Bank of England, OECD, World Bank, G7, LSE etc etc
The government report you cited stated in the middle case scenario the economy would grow regardless, it claimed the economy would not grow as fast if the UK left. Whereas we would not be sending £250 million a week to the EU.
I am using the middle case scenarios and I am also taking account of the net EU contribution - and the conclusion is that we will be about £900 million a week worse off if we leave the EU than if we stay.
Wake up, smell the coffee Prof, just think of all the things that £250 million each week pays for - think of the increased jobs, the increased tax, higher wages, the massive increases in public services.
We won't have a penny extra to pay for any of these things due to the economic hit - we will have about £900 million less per week in the economy to provide jobs, taxes and related public services if we leave than if we stay.
And this comes from the expert opinions of the world's most respected independent economic organisations - e.g. IMF, IFS, Treasury, Bank of England, OECD, World Bank, G7, LSE etc etc.
I think we are still waiting for you to provide any credible and independent economic organisation that predicts that we will be better off if we leave rather than stay - why, because all the credible independent economic organisations have already given their views and they are unanimous - we will be considerably worse off if we leave compared to if we stay.