The Borneo Post

Brexit ‘airbags’ being tested by businesses before exit day

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LONDON: With just 40 days until the UK is due to leave the European Union ( EU), businesses are testing their emergency Brexit preparatio­ns to ensure they have enough cash and staff in the event of a disorderly exit, KPMG said.

Unless Prime Minister Theresa May can get a Brexit deal approved by the British parliament, she will have to decide whether to delay Brexit or thrust the world’s fifth largest economy into chaos by leaving without a deal on March 29.

“Businesses are now testing the airbags on their Brexit preparatio­ns,” said James Stewart, head of Brexit at KPMG UK. “Time is a luxury we no longer have, so people are bracing themselves for the immediate potential impacts.”

“After a slew of poor economic data, and Brexit uncertaint­y stretching a long way beyond the point most people had anticipate­d, the mood of business is darkening,” Stewart said.

Unless there is a deal or a delay, the UK will leave the EU without a transition period abruptly at 2300GMT on March 29, a step that is almost certain to disrupt trade and spook financial markets.

With fears growing that the political brinkmansh­ip in London could lead, as May has warned, to Britain leaving without a deal, businesses and the EU’s executive have ramped up planning for such an eventualit­y.

KPMG said its sees the probabilit­y of the UK leaving with a Brexit deal of some kind at around 55 per cent; the chances of a no- deal Brexit at around 30 per cent; and the chances of no Brexit at 15 per cent.

The Bank of England has said the hit to the economy from a disorderly Brexit could be harder than that of the global financial crisis a decade ago.

Brexit supporters say while there may be some short-term disruption, in the long-term the UK will thrive outside what they cast as a doomed experiment in German- dominated unity that is falling far behind the US and China. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Dealers work at their desks whilst screens show market data following a vote by Prime Minister May’s Brexit ‘plan B’ at CMC Markets in London, Britain. With just 40 days until the UK is due to leave the EU, businesses are testing their emergency Brexit preparatio­ns to ensure they have enough cash and staff in the event of a disorderly exit. — Reuters photo
Dealers work at their desks whilst screens show market data following a vote by Prime Minister May’s Brexit ‘plan B’ at CMC Markets in London, Britain. With just 40 days until the UK is due to leave the EU, businesses are testing their emergency Brexit preparatio­ns to ensure they have enough cash and staff in the event of a disorderly exit. — Reuters photo

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