The Manila Times

‘No-deal’ scenario: What happens if Brexit talks fail?

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LONDON: and City job losses: catastroph­ic prediction­s of Britain crashing out of the EU with no deal in place abound despite the more upbeat tone from Friday’s EU summit.

Prime Minister Theresa May has not ruled out walking away from the talks and some hardliners in her own party are urging her to do so to avoid paying a “divorce bill” and for a cleaner, simpler Brexit.

But many warn that leaving the EU with no agreement on future ties could damage the British economy.

So what could a worst case “no-deal” scenario look like?

Food

Britain and the EU would have to fall back to World Trade Organizati­on rules to trade with each other, meaning a series of tariffs on imports and exports which are particular­ly high for farm products.

The British Retail Consortium has estimated that the price of cheese could rise by more than 30 percent.

A slice of Italian parmesan selling for £5 in a British supermarke­t would jump to £6.50.

The BRC estimated the average cost of food imported by retailers from the EU would increase by 22 percent.

Britain imports around 60 percent of its food from the EU, particular­ly fruit and vegetables.

Flights

With no deal in place, airlines based in Britain would no longer be allowed to as British Airways would be required to obtain European authorisat­ion indi - of passengers a day.

“It is theoretica­lly conceivabl­e in a no-deal scenario that there will be no air EU on March 29, 2019,” Finance Minister Philip Hammond said earlier this month when asked about the prospect by a committee of MPs.

But he added: “I don’t think anybody seriously believes that is where we will get to.”

Cars

Imports and exports of cars would face 10 percent tariffs. That could hurt foreign carmakers with UK operations such as Nissan, whose plant in Brexit-voting Sunderland employs around 7,000 people and exports more than 80 percent of its vehicles.

Costs are likely to be passed on to consumers.

“Import tariffs alone could push up the list price of cars imported in the UK from the continent by an average of £1,500,” the Society for Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders said in a report.

Finance

Financial institutio­ns would lose “passportin­g rights” that allow for cross-border services to clients across the bloc. Tens of thousands of as banks and insurers are forced to transfer EU-linked business to subsidiari­es in the EU.

- ready started enacting contingenc­y plans - sterdam, Dublin or Frankfurt opening up.

Oliver Wyman, a consultanc­y, estimates up to 75,000 jobs could be lost in Britain’s

Custom queues

Customs declaratio­ns required at British ports would rise from the current 55 million to 255 million a year if there is no separate deal.

The British Retail Consortium said this could mean delays at ports of “up to two or three days.”

In an interview with The Times last month, Hammond warned the port of Dover was “clearly not” equipped as “the volumes of trade at Dover could not be accommodat­ed if goods had to be held for inspection.”

Irish border

Checkpoint­s would return to the 499 kilometer (310-mile) border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

The checks would be hugely disruptive for the 30,000 people who cross it every day, often to work.

It could also revive smuggling, once a lucrative income for militia groups and revive sectarian tensions that have been largely dormant since a 1998 peace deal put an end

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said earlier that customs posts would be “a brutal physical manifestat­ion of historic divisions and political failure... a place of bloodshed and violence.”

Electricit­y

Once Britain leaves the Euratom treaty, other countries would no longer be able to send nuclear materials or components for its power plants unless a separate arrangemen­t is agreed.

Britain’s Nuclear Industries Associatio­n has as nuclear power accounts for around 20 percent of the country’s electricit­y production.

Leaving Euratom without any other kind of deal in place would also stop the supply of radioactiv­e isotopes used to diagnose and treat cancer patients, which are not produced in Britain.

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