Brexit is set to deliver a much-heralded jobs boom with more than 80,000 new roles to be created - in Frankfurt.

A new report released by lobby group Frankfurt Main Finance found that the expected influx of 10,000 financial services staff over the next four years - fuelled by relocation plans and a banking exodus from London - will result in the creation of up to 87,667 new roles throughout the Rhein-Main-Region.

The study measured Brexit’s effect on non-financial job growth in the city and the surrounding region across industries as diverse as real estate, auto trade, healthcare and technical services, and the rise in tax receipts for local government.

It predicts an extra 191 million euros - £176m - in local tax revenues for Frankfurt each year, when accounting for the additional income tax, value-added tax and local business tax. Even based on the report’s “prudent” scenario, the Brexit ripple effect would result in at least 35,913 new jobs outside of financial services, and an additional 136 million euros - £125m - in annual tax revenues for Frankfurt.

Hubertus Vath, the managing director of Frankfurt Main Finance said: “The job growth will further advance the economic strength of Frankfurt and the region. It is a real success story for all parties involved.

“Now it is important to shape this growth positively. However, the additional jobs also bring the funds to invest and master the challenge.”

The news is another blow to Brexit backers, including Boris Johnson, who predicted as many as 300,000 new jobs would be created in the UK if the country voted to leave the EU.

He was citing research from the Vote Leave campaign which claimed the UK had missed out on 284,000 jobs due to the EU’s failure to strike trade agreements with Japan, India and the US.

Instead, jobs have been lost and the country’s financial services industry has seen a steady stream of bankers shifted from the City into the EU, costing the Treasury millions in lost tax receipts.