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Carney sees a £900 Brexit cost to household incomes

Mark Carney has claimed the Brexit vote has left households £900 worse off, describing the sum as "a lot of money."

The governor of the Bank of England made his remarks while giving evidence of a committee of MPs - stating his belief that the effects of the EU divorce vote of June 2016 had lowered UK GDP by 2%.

Mr Carney has previously spoken of the damage inflicted on the economy by the referendum result, which saw prices surge on the back of a plunge in the value of the pound and business investment slow amid uncertainty on the path ahead.

The central bank chief, who became a hate figure for Brexiteers ahead of the vote when he claimed there was a possibility of recession if Leave won, argued the current UK slowdown was in stark contrast to its main competitors.

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In the session with members of the Treasury Select Committee, the governor was also forced to defend the Bank's decision not to raise interest rates this month as it had previously guided it could.

Its chair, Nicky Morgan MP, asked if the hint of a "somewhat earlier-than-expected" rate hike was "rather confusing" for households and businesses.

The Bank's monetary policy committee (MPC) vote of 7-2 was driven, in his case Mr Carney said, by the economy failing to meet forecasts in the first quarter of the year.

He explained: "We give guidance. The guidance is conditional on the economic outlook.

He added: "Inflation came in lower, economic momentum - a number signs - were lower, and then ultimately the hard data came in lower as well and we as a committee sat back, looked back at that data and took our own assessments."

Market forecasts currently see a 40% chance of a rate rise at August's meeting.

Mr Carney told the committee he did not believe the economy was as weak as the first estimate of first quarter growth suggested.

The ONS is due to give updated figures for the January-March period on Friday.