The document is published minus an annex deemed sensitive to the U.K.'s negotiating position | Jack Taylor/Getty Images UK’s Brexit impact analysis published The document, leaked to Buzzfeed in January, projects that Britain will be worse off in every scenario leaving the EU

The House of Commons Brexit committee has published the U.K. government's assessment of the economic impact of Brexit. The 27-page document, leaked to Buzzfeed in January, projects that the U.K. will be worse off in every scenario after Brexit.

The committee forced the government to hand the analysis to them and after consultations with ministers, has published it minus an annex deemed sensitive to the U.K.'s negotiating position.

"Allowing this information to be considered in its full context, rather than selectively quoted, will help properly to inform public debate about how the figures were arrived at and what the economic effects of Brexit might be," said committee Chair Hilary Benn.

“The analysis suggests that there will be an adverse effect on the economy of the U.K. and all its regions, and that the degree of impact will depend on the outcome achieved in the negotiations," he added.

Commenting on the document, Stephen Doughty MP, a supporter of the Open Britain campaign, said: “The Government have tried to hide the truth from the people about the cost of Brexit for months, but parliament has asserted its sovereign rights and forced publication."

“There can be no more denial from ministers about the true costs and risks of Brexit. It is the Government’s own assessment that has now been published and all their Brexit scenarios have one thing in common: we will all be worse off if Brexit takes place," he added.

In her Mansion House speech last week, May stated that “in certain ways our access to each other’s market [after Brexit] will be less than they are now.”