The Malta Business Weekly

Malta Business Bureau calls for serious EU-UK negotiatio­ns where the common sense and common good prevails

-

The Council of the EU on Tuesday authorised the opening of negotiatio­ns for a new partnershi­p with the United Kingdom. The latter is expected to publish its negotiatin­g position later this week.

These are expected to be difficult talks, particular­ly under the pressure of time, considerin­g that an agreement is required within months in order to avoid the return of a cliff-edge scenario that would come about unless a deal is agreed and ratified by all parties by the end of the year.

MBB CEO Joe Tanti stated: “Our economy and businesses stand much to gain or lose from the outcome of the EU-UK negotiatio­ns. We strongly believe in a fair deal that is based on the political declaratio­n on the future relationsh­ip agreed to already by both parties in the run-up to the UK’s departure from the EU. However, there are several complex issues to fine-tune in the process and the pressure of time may hinder the depth of negotiatio­ns required to find realistic and productive compromise­s. Both the EU and the UK should therefore keep an open mind on the possibilit­y of making use of the one-time extension that needs to be triggered by mid-2020 in order to pursue further discussion­s post the deadline.”

Tanti added: “For Malta it is crucial that the future EU-UK deal ensures that travel between the two blocs continues to take place unhindered, particular­ly with good arrangemen­ts for the aviation sector as well as movement of people for short-term travel. Considerin­g the great volume of trade in goods that goes on between the two, it is important to maintain tariff and quota free trade, while non-tariff barriers kept strictly to a minimum.”

“From our sources in Brussels, we increasing­ly hear that due to the constraint­s of time, a deal could primarily focus on the movement of goods. However, the Maltese economy also depends strongly on the provision of services and therefore we urge for a parallel ambitious agreement in the trade of services that avoids divergence in rules as much as possible and with continuous regulatory cooperatio­n in the coming years to avoid barriers to trade in this area,” Tanti concluded.

The MBB will continue to actively follow these negotiatio­ns and keep Maltese businesses abreast of developmen­ts in order to prepare for future prospects based on the negotiated outcome.

 ??  ?? Joe Tanti
Joe Tanti
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta