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We'll never be able to quantify the true cost of Brexit, but the fact that it's already cost the economy c.£200bn in lost GDP and c.£80bn in lost govt income gives you some idea of why this country is in such dire straits.

#CostOfBrexit #BrexitReality

#C4News

bsky.app/profile/just...

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🚨CHEAPER! Brexit in the last 4 years:

🔥 Gas ⬆️ 94.1%
⚡️Electric ⬆️ 78%
⛽️ Fuel ⬆️ 49.3%
🏨 Hotels ⬆️ 37.8%
🏠 Rent ⬆️ 25%
🍞 Food ⬆️ 25%

📉 Average earnings DOWN 2.8%⬇️

🤔 Still think Brexit was worth it?

#BrexitReality #CostOfBrexit #RejoinEU

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💀 Brexit has cost us £600bn-£1TRILLION since 2016. That's £9k-£15k stolen from every person in the UK.

But hey, at least we "saved" £9bn/year on EU fees! What a bargain! 3/5

#BrexitDisaster #CostOfBrexit

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This letter appeared in The Yorkshire Post on 11 July 2025. The writer takes issues with a previous correspondents figures regarding the costs to the UK of being a member of the  European Union. He also argues the Britain actually got far more out of being in the EU than it actually contributed.

This letter appeared in The Yorkshire Post on 11 July 2025. The writer takes issues with a previous correspondents figures regarding the costs to the UK of being a member of the European Union. He also argues the Britain actually got far more out of being in the EU than it actually contributed.

#BrexitLies still being told about #EU membership costs - says this @yorkshirepost.co.uk letter. Our gains financially far outweighed our contributions. #CostOfBrexit #RejoinEU

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🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨
Since Brexit, UK rents have surged to record highs:

🇬🇧England: £1,369/month up 9.2% PA
🇬🇧London: £2,227/month up 11% PA
🇬🇧UK Average: £1,327/month up 9.1% from last year

Brexit’s broken promises are hurting you.
#RejoinEU #BrexitRebels #CostOfBrexit

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NHS and social care professionals
Following Brexit, the UK has continued to rely heavily on very high migration of health care staff from outside the EU – rather than to rely more on training and retaining staff domestically. In England, two thirds of the increase in registered nurses since the exit from the single market as 2020 ended has come from staff trained outside the UK or European Economic Area (EEA).
By November 2024, one in 11 (9%) of all NHS doctors in England held a nationality from one of the countries listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) as having such a shortage of staff that other countries should not recruit from them.
A recent collapse in inward migration of social care workers following a sudden tightening of policy illustrates how unstable this approach is without the stability of EU rights.
The UK is on course to diverge meaningfully by cutting the number of hours of clinical training it requires for nurses to qualify, well below what EU law demands. While this is not outside the range that other comparable countries require, it will likely preclude any possibility of re-establishing the mutual recognition of nursing qualifications with the EU.

NHS and social care professionals Following Brexit, the UK has continued to rely heavily on very high migration of health care staff from outside the EU – rather than to rely more on training and retaining staff domestically. In England, two thirds of the increase in registered nurses since the exit from the single market as 2020 ended has come from staff trained outside the UK or European Economic Area (EEA). By November 2024, one in 11 (9%) of all NHS doctors in England held a nationality from one of the countries listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) as having such a shortage of staff that other countries should not recruit from them. A recent collapse in inward migration of social care workers following a sudden tightening of policy illustrates how unstable this approach is without the stability of EU rights. The UK is on course to diverge meaningfully by cutting the number of hours of clinical training it requires for nurses to qualify, well below what EU law demands. While this is not outside the range that other comparable countries require, it will likely preclude any possibility of re-establishing the mutual recognition of nursing qualifications with the EU.

Procurement and the supply of medicines
The elevated and troubling level of medicine shortages we noted in earlier reports in this series is continuing, with no sign of improvement in key indicators. We have previously concluded that this is not primarily due to Brexit, with other EU countries also suffering significant shortages. However, data now confirm the UK to have had the lowest import growth in medicines of any G7 country, driven by a reduction in EU imports. This does illustrate the particular impacts of leaving the EU.
The UK’s 2023 Procurement Act moves procurement away from EU law. A carve-out frees the English NHS from the requirement to go through as many full procurement processes – a requirement created originally by its unique attempt to run a market inside the public service since the 1990s.
It also creates somewhat more space to prioritise local businesses, and social and environmental goals, rather than simply going with the lowest offer. However, it does not go as far as some had hoped in limiting space for corruption and exploitation by suppliers.

Procurement and the supply of medicines The elevated and troubling level of medicine shortages we noted in earlier reports in this series is continuing, with no sign of improvement in key indicators. We have previously concluded that this is not primarily due to Brexit, with other EU countries also suffering significant shortages. However, data now confirm the UK to have had the lowest import growth in medicines of any G7 country, driven by a reduction in EU imports. This does illustrate the particular impacts of leaving the EU. The UK’s 2023 Procurement Act moves procurement away from EU law. A carve-out frees the English NHS from the requirement to go through as many full procurement processes – a requirement created originally by its unique attempt to run a market inside the public service since the 1990s. It also creates somewhat more space to prioritise local businesses, and social and environmental goals, rather than simply going with the lowest offer. However, it does not go as far as some had hoped in limiting space for corruption and exploitation by suppliers.

The UK is diverging from the EU on its approach to AI regulation
Against the AI Act passed by the EU last year, the UK has taken a fundamentally different approach to regulating AI. While the EU Act creates a system to classify and assess all uses of AI, the UK has told regulators in each sector to take their own approach based on shared principles.
Rhetorically, the EU has emphasised safety and the protection of rights, while the previous UK government emphasised its openness to innovation and a desire to attract investors. But the reality is that for AI systems intended to treat or diagnose as medical devices, the UK and EU systems largely share technical standards, meaning differences in what is actually required can be minimal.
The costs to business of having to follow two systems, even where they are similar, will remain a problem for the UK in AI medical devices. If divergence grows over time because of the different principles of EU regulation, AI firms will feel pressure to prioritise standards in the much larger EU market – the ‘Brussels effect’ – even if at least some see its rules
as more burdensome than UK regulation.
If the UK follows through on its plan to stop recognising EU medical device approvals in 2030, this will confront firms producing new products with the sharp choice of accepting the costs of an extra regulatory system, or not serving the market in Great Britain.
Because it is based on separate types of products, the UK system has no obvious way to deal with AI systems that were never intended for health care being used in this way – something increasingly prevalent as generative systems are used across society, including by health professionals. Open AI’s GPT-4.5 is not sold as a medical device, but it is beyond doubt that both patients and professionals have at times used it to inform diagnosis.

The UK is diverging from the EU on its approach to AI regulation Against the AI Act passed by the EU last year, the UK has taken a fundamentally different approach to regulating AI. While the EU Act creates a system to classify and assess all uses of AI, the UK has told regulators in each sector to take their own approach based on shared principles. Rhetorically, the EU has emphasised safety and the protection of rights, while the previous UK government emphasised its openness to innovation and a desire to attract investors. But the reality is that for AI systems intended to treat or diagnose as medical devices, the UK and EU systems largely share technical standards, meaning differences in what is actually required can be minimal. The costs to business of having to follow two systems, even where they are similar, will remain a problem for the UK in AI medical devices. If divergence grows over time because of the different principles of EU regulation, AI firms will feel pressure to prioritise standards in the much larger EU market – the ‘Brussels effect’ – even if at least some see its rules as more burdensome than UK regulation. If the UK follows through on its plan to stop recognising EU medical device approvals in 2030, this will confront firms producing new products with the sharp choice of accepting the costs of an extra regulatory system, or not serving the market in Great Britain. Because it is based on separate types of products, the UK system has no obvious way to deal with AI systems that were never intended for health care being used in this way – something increasingly prevalent as generative systems are used across society, including by health professionals. Open AI’s GPT-4.5 is not sold as a medical device, but it is beyond doubt that both patients and professionals have at times used it to inform diagnosis.

The UK has no single strategy for health and Brexit
Five years on from leaving the EU, the UK is taking a very variable approach to divergence in law and regulation. In many areas, it has been sticking with the EU law it inherited, or even actively mimicking its larger neighbour. But in procurement, staff training and AI, it has taken different choices – though the extent of difference is often overstated. For migration, medicines and funding, meanwhile, the UK has struggled to find a new equilibrium.
In all these areas, constant change in technology and in EU law and policy means that Brexit is not a policy issue that can be resolved but an ongoing source of tension and pressure. For sectors that often involve international trade, including AI, divergence will create an intrinsic cost from companies complying twice. This creates a standing disadvantage set against any intrinsic benefits.
The UK’s different strategies in important areas of health policy would complicate any fundamental move to realign with the EU, even as this is a preferred approach in other policy areas.

The UK has no single strategy for health and Brexit Five years on from leaving the EU, the UK is taking a very variable approach to divergence in law and regulation. In many areas, it has been sticking with the EU law it inherited, or even actively mimicking its larger neighbour. But in procurement, staff training and AI, it has taken different choices – though the extent of difference is often overstated. For migration, medicines and funding, meanwhile, the UK has struggled to find a new equilibrium. In all these areas, constant change in technology and in EU law and policy means that Brexit is not a policy issue that can be resolved but an ongoing source of tension and pressure. For sectors that often involve international trade, including AI, divergence will create an intrinsic cost from companies complying twice. This creates a standing disadvantage set against any intrinsic benefits. The UK’s different strategies in important areas of health policy would complicate any fundamental move to realign with the EU, even as this is a preferred approach in other policy areas.

Key points from @nuffieldtrust.bsky.social report on Brexit + UK Health
1. Taking medical staff from countries with shortages + lowering UK qualification standards
2. Medicine shortages
3. Divergence on AI reg is a problem
4. No coherent plan
#CostOfBrexit
www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/research/hea...

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Thanks for all your awareness raising, Mike, and helping get the brexit supporting public to see the light and join you in the fight to get our star back. 🇪🇺

#CostOfBrexit
#CostOfGreedCrisis
#BrexitScandal #Brexit, the gift that keeps taking.

@europeanpowell.bsky.social @brexitbin.bsky.social

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Cost of Brexit on UK’s tourism industry revealed – with the worst yet to come ‘The UK is likely to lose competitive share both within Europe and globally,’ says VisitBritain

The tourism slump to the UK triggered by Brexit is continuing. The annual VisitBritain forecast for inbound tourism shows spending is sharply down compared with 2019, the year before the UK left the EU
(has dropped 9% when adjusted for inflation)

#CostOfBrexit
www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-...

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Brexit has done enormous harm to the UK – Starmer needs to urgently repair the damage As turmoil hits the markets with the UK being hit harder than most, Chris Blackhurst looks at why saying Brexit is to blame for much of the difficulties we are in is still a taboo and why unless we co...

Bloomberg Economics estimates that the UK is suffering £100bn a year in lost output from leaving the EU. The Office for Budget Responsibility calculates that UK trade will sustain a 15 per cent hit in the long term from Brexit
#CostOfBrexit

www.independent.co.uk/news/busines...

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