Jeremy Corbyn has hailed Karl Marx as a 'great economist' who has influenced the world.

Labour's left-wing leader has echoed his deputy John McDonnell in singing the praises of the founder of Communism - who urged the workers to unite in revolution to overthrow capitalism.

It comes as Treasury Minister David Gauke warned that Labour's Marxist leadership would turn Britain into a 'hard-left experiment' if they win the General Election.

Jeremy Corbyn, pictured at a rally in Worcester today, said Karl Marx is was a great thinker

The left-wing Labour leader, pictured today in Worcester, made the comments while on a visit to plug the party's policy to scrap hospital car parking charges

Mr Corbyn's remarks are likely to enrage his moderate backbenchers who are angry with the party's lurch to the left.

Asked while out campaigning in Worcester if he was influenced by the ideas of Marx, Mr Corbyn said: 'All great economists influence all of our thinking.

'Yes, I have read some of Adam Smith, I have read some of Karl Marx, I have looked at the words of Ricardo, I have looked at many, many others.

'I don't consider myself the world's greatest intellectual but you learnt from everybody, don't close your mind to the thoughts of others - that way, we're all better informed.'

David Ricardo and Adam Smith were both British classical economists whose writings had a major influence on politics and economics.

His comments came after Mr McDonnell, his close ally and shadow chancellor, said Britain has 'a lot to learn' from Marx's Das Kapital.

The Communist bible called for the overthrow of capitalism and inspired violent revolutions in Russia, south America and Asia.

Mr Corbyn later took his campaign message to Leamington Spa where he delivered a speech on the steps of the town hall

The Labour leader pictured today, addressed a couple of hundred of people at his rally

John McDonnell, pictured on the BBC's Andrew Mar show yesterday, where he said that Britain could learn a lot from Karl Marx's Das Kapital - the Communist bible

Treasury Minister David Gauke, pictured in Downing Street in March, has warned that Labour's leadership want to take Britain down a hard-left path

Mr Gauke said the Communist experiment has been 'catastrophic' – and caused poverty, disease and unhappiness in the countries subjected to it.

And he urged voters not to risk Britain becoming the next 'hard-left experiment' by voting in Mr Corbyn or the smaller parties who could parachute him into No 10 at the head of a 'coalition of chaos'.

In an article for The Times he wrote: 'John McDonnell was, for once, absolutely correct on Sunday when he said that reading Das Kapital could teach us some important lessons.

'It may not have been quite what the shadow chancellor meant, but the collected works of Karl Marx tell us an awful lot about what the consequences of a future Labour government might be.

'Nonsensical in idea and catastrophic in implementation, the Marxist agenda that Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell have pursued for decades has proved disastrous for the people who have to endure its consequences.'

Karl Marx wrote Das Kapital, a revolutionary text which inspired generations of Communists and preached insurrection and revolution around the world

But he warned that Britain has never been at greater risk of being turned into a Communist state.

He wrote: 'Yet, thanks to support from politicians from the Lib Dems, SNP and the Greens, the possibility of Jeremy Corbyn in power and turning Britain into the next hard-left experiment, has never been more real.'

Labour have already hinted that those earning more than £80,000 could be hit by tax hikes after June 8.

And Gauke warned that Labour's 'anti-business agenda' will damage jobs and livelihood.

He urged voters not to back parties such as The Greens who have called for an electoral pact with Labour against the Tories.

He wrote: 'These are the likely consequences of a coalition of chaos. Because when it comes to hiking taxes and nonsensical economics, Corbyn has willing accomplices in the other parties.'

The latest poll puts the Tories ahead on 49 points with Labour lagging behind on 27 points

He warned that with tough Brexit talks underway, now is not the time to risk Britain's stability.

Such crucial negotiations must not be entrusted to left-wingers like Mr McDonnell, who has previously said he would like to 'go back to the 1980s and assassinate Thatcher' and read out form Mao Zedong's 'little red book' famous book of quotes during a debate in Parliament.

Mr Gauke wrote: 'Karl Marx may rest at ease in Highgate Cemetery, but his ideals are still common currency just a stone's throw away with Jeremy Corbyn's Islington cabal.

'And at this election every vote for Labour, the Lib Dems and UKIP brings them one step closer to the centre of power.'

Tom Brake, Lib Dem candidate for Carshalton and Wallingto. said: 'Corbyn and McDonnell seem to be competing to see who can make Labour more unelectable.

'At this rate, the Labour manifesto will be laced with quotes from Das Kapital.'

Mr McDonnell yesterday refused to deny that he would be Britain's first Marxist chancellor if elected on June 8.

Appearing on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show, he said: 'I believe there is a lot to learn from reading Das Kapital, of course there is, and that has been recommended not just by me but many others - mainstream economists as well.'