"it is very tough to anticipate what the ones results
may be but that uncertainty would be a negative factor and are available at a
time while the global recuperation remains sluggish and particularly
susceptible," David Lipton, first deputy handling director of the IMF,
said at a news convention in BEIJING.
"That sort of uncertainty could be unhelpful."
Britons will vote in a referendum on June 23 on whether or
not to stay in the european.
A vote to leave the 28-member bloc, dubbed Brexit, ought to
tip Europe returned into recession and throw worldwide monetary markets into
turmoil.
Britain's "go away" campaign has opened up a
7-point lead over "remain" an opinion ballot confirmed past due on Monday, at the same
time as the country's largest-selling newspaper urged readers to vote to stop
the bloc.
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