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Iain Duncan Smith compares George Osborne to 'Pinocchio' over Brexit house prices claim

'Let me just remind everybody that it was George Osborne who said Treasury reports couldn't be trusted'

Charlie Cooper
Monday 13 June 2016 07:30 EDT
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Leave campaigner Iain Duncan Smith disputed George Osborne's claims over house prices
Leave campaigner Iain Duncan Smith disputed George Osborne's claims over house prices (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

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Former Cabinet minister Iain Duncan Smith has renewed the Tory war or words over the referendum campaign, comparing George Osborne to “Pinocchio” over his claim that house prices could plummet as a result of Brexit.

The former Work and Pensions Secretary and Leave campaigner, who resigned in March citing frustration with cuts to the disability welfare budget, said that Mr Osborne’s claim, based on a Treasury analysis due to be published next week, made him “think of Pinocchio and the nose growing rather long”.

“Let me just remind everybody that it was the Treasury and George Osborne who said when we came into power in 2010 we couldn’t trust Treasury reports because they were always fiddled with by chancellors of the exchequer,” Mr Duncan Smith told Sky News.

Mr Osborne has said the economic shock of Brexit could hold back house prices, meaning they would be 18 per cent lower by 2018 than they would be if the UK votes to remain.

Speaking at a meeting of G7 country finance ministers, Mr Osborne said the claim was backed by soon-to-be-published Treasury figures.

He told the BBC: “Next week the Treasury is going to publish analysis of what the immediate impact will be and one consequence of leaving the European Union is that there would be a hit to the value of people’s homes of at least 10 per cent, and up to 18 per cent.”

Warning of an “immediate economic shock that will hit financial markets”, the Chancellor said that mortgage repayments could also rise.

The figures cited by Mr Osborne suggest the Treasury is assuming a shock to the housing market similar in magnitude to that experienced in the global financial crisis. House prices, as measured by the Nationwide, fell 20 per cent between 2007 and 2009.

But over the past seven years house prices have recovered strongly, rising 34 per cent. This has far outstripped wage growth and has exacerbated an affordability crisis for first-time buyers.

Britons have traditionally been sensitive to house prices because a very large proportion of many families’ net worth is tied up in housing. Research also suggests people’s spending patterns are influenced by house values, implying a fall in house prices could also deter spending, which would damage the overall economy.

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