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A British exit from the European Union would be a serious risk to global economic growth, Group of Seven leaders said in a summit declaration on Friday, although German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the issue had not been discussed.
The statement will be welcomed by the British government, which has made a series of warnings about the domestic cost of leaving the bloc at a June 23 referendum on EU membership.
Brexit was listed alongside geopolitical conflicts, terrorism and refugee flows as a potential shock of a “non-economic origin”.
The issue was not formally on the agenda at the two-day summit in Japan, but British government officials had said they expected it would come up on the margins.
Merkel said on Friday that leaders had not discussed Brexit but there was a consensus that they wanted the country to stay in.
Opinion polls have given conflicting steers on which way the vote might go, with telephone polls suggesting “In” is comfortably ahead while online polls suggest a tight race that “Out” could win. Betting odds heavily favour an “In” vote.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has also warned that British voters risk paying a “Brexit tax”, equivalent to a month’s salary, by 2020, if they leave the EU.
Last week, G7 finance leaders united in wishing Britain stayed in the EU, but acknowledged they could do little more than hope.
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