Please stop lying, the Treasury Report I was referring to predicted in GDP terms we'll be richer than we are now if we leave, that is a stone cold fact.
Nope this analysis (from the Treasury) is, unsurprisingly, completely consistent with their earlier report - the difference being that this report focusses on short range effects (over the first few years) while the earlier report headlined on the effects by 2030, but of course modelled the early years hit to the economy as part of that analysis.
This new drivel by a man who is supposed to be protecting our economy is damaging our economy by talking it down so badly.
But this is from the Treasury, you know the people who produced that report which you are fixated with (why I have no idea). So when the Treasury produce something that you mistakenly interpret as being positive to your position you bring it up endlessly, when the self same people produce something you don't like it is drivel - double standards to the n-th degree.
On the Sunday Politics the predictions from one of those reports that Davey is a fan boy of put it something like this:-
Growth in UK economy by 2030
Stay 42%
Leave with free trade deal 39%
Leave with no free trade deal 36%
Citation please or are these numbers just more made up stuff from you and your Brexit chums.
Sounds a bit like the earlier Treasury figures, except you have them wrong. The Treasury predict that by 2030 Brexit would result in a loss of GDP of approximately 4% if we become a member of the EEA (which would mean signing to up pretty less all EU regulations including free movement of labour), over 6% if we negotiate a bilateral deal and 7.5% without a deal - compared to the case where we remain. That's a big hit on our economy compared to staying. And of course there will be a big economic hit in the early years which is likely to result in recession (as indicated but the Treasury, the Bank of England, PwC/CBI, Citi, Deutsche Bank, Nomura, Société Générale etc)
What a cheap price for freedom!
Your complacency about the damage that Brexit would do to our economic performance in both the short and long terms is really quite staggering.