Anticipated impacts of Brexit scenarios on UK food prices and implications for policies on poverty and health: a structured expert judgement update
Martine J Barons, Willy Aspinall

TL;DR
This study uses expert judgment to forecast Brexit's potential impact on UK food prices, indicating significant increases that could worsen food insecurity and health outcomes, with implications for policy responses.
Contribution
It provides a structured expert elicitation to quantify potential food price changes under different Brexit scenarios, highlighting likely impacts on food insecurity and health.
Findings
Median food prices could increase by up to 35% under full WTO Brexit scenario.
Food insecurity and its severity are likely to rise due to increased food prices.
Health service demand may increase due to diet-related health issues.
Abstract
Food insecurity is associated with increased risk for several health conditions and with increased national burden of chronic disease. Key determinants for household food insecurity are income and food costs. Forecasts show household disposable income for 2020 expected to fall and for 2021 to rise only slightly. Prices are forecast to rise. Thus, future increased food prices would be a significant driver of greater food insecurity. Structured expert judgement elicitation, a well-established method for quantifying uncertainty, using experts. In July 2020, each expert estimated the median, 5th percentile and 95th percentile quantiles of changes in price to April 2022 for ten food categories under three end-2020 settlement Brexit scenarios: A: full WTO terms; B: a moderately disruptive trade agreement (better than WTO); C: a minimally disruptive trade agreement. When combined in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEmployment and Welfare Studies
