Hints and tips:
...Richard Portes, professor of economics, London Business School: No. Badly. Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute: No....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics I think that is the right assessment, an honest self-assessment....
...But I’m not sure the effect will be very large....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics By 0.75-1.0 per cent (real yoy)....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics No differently than rest of world, subjecting the world to a boom-bust in 2017-18 with bills to pay and reversal of dollar strength...
...But I’m not sure that’ll be a problem either in political or economic terms....
...I’m not sure that’s fair. The strength of the recovery and erosion of slack has been much more of a real phenomenon than a nominal one....
...In the near term, there may no clarity about the post-EU arrangements....
...I’m not sure how dramatic the effect of government policy on house prices will actually be....
...But the average pace of growth will continue to slip: after 2.9% in 2014 and an estimated 2.4% this year I'm expecting 2.2% in 2016....
...But I'm not sure whether it will improve by the end of 2016....
...So, no, no impact straight away....
...Adam Posen, Director Peterson Institute No, the UK will not reach full employment in 2015....
...The next one will do the same, I’m sure....
...Adam Posen, Director Peterson Institute I believe that UK households will do better on real income in 2015 than in most recent years....
...David Owen, Jefferies Barring any unforeseen event, yes....
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