Cape Times

Post-Brexit free trade deal unacceptab­le

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meetings in recent weeks that they won’t agree to a deal that would allow finance companies to operate in each others’ markets without barriers, because Britain has said it will leave the single market, according to two people who attended the meetings.

The plan proposed that Britain and the EU would allow cross-border trade in financial services on the condition that each side preserves regulatory standards that were in line with the best internatio­nal standards.

This model would be maintained by close co-operation between regulators and financial policymake­rs.

Executives have been working on the plan for the past year, writing detailed papers setting out how a pact could be structured and policed, and it had also been endorsed by Britain’s Brexit minister David Davis.

But EU officials are dismissive of any trade models that would see Britain retain similar levels of market access while leaving the single market regime.

“They have made it very clear to us that this is unacceptab­le to them,” said one senior British finance executive present at one of the meetings. “This was our best and frankly only proposal. We don’t have a plan B.”

Britain’s vast financial services look set to be one of the most divisive areas in the Brexit negotiatio­ns, with Britain demanding a generous deal while the EU refuses to shift from its insistence that Britain’s red lines – such as ending the free movement of workers from the EU – make that impossible.

It represents a second setback for the City of London, which had initially pinned hopes on Britain maintainin­g “passportin­g” in financial services after Brexit. – Reuters

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