Gulf News

Hard Brexit would hit Germany hardest

There’s a little more than six months to hammer out a final divorce settlement

- BY MICK O’REILLY

Foreign Correspond­ent

With the clock now very much counting down to the UK’s exit from the European Union one year from now, much of the focus on the effects of the divorce has focused on just how the UK will fare in a post-Brexit world.

But a new study shows that the decision by 17.4 million Britons who voted to leave the EU will also have an extensive — and expensive — knock-on effect across the continent.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy and the world’s fourthlarg­est last year, estimates its businesses could be sideswiped by losses of as much as €9 billion (Dh40.9 billion) annually if Britain crashes out of the EU with no final deal in place.

Any final deal on the UK’s divorce terms has to be ratified by all other 27 members, the European parliament and by the European Commission — meaning there are a little more than six months left for that to happen.

If the UK doesn’t reach a deal — the so-called “hard Brexit” occurs. That means the UK would revert to trade rules overseen by the World Trade Organisati­on. For German businesses who do business with their UK counterpar­ts, that would be the worse-case scenario.

WTO rules would mean tariffs and regulatory barriers including licensing procedures and potentiall­y lengthy waits at borders, which also result in costs for businesses, a report by management consultant­s Oliver Wyman and multinatio­nal law firm Clifford Chance says. And they say German auto manufactur­ers would be hardest hit, with the sector accounting for one-third of that €9-billion hit every year.

No deal, the report warns, would mean Britons would face a €32 billion shortfall. And across the EU27, the cost would be €39 billion, with the shock waves hitting the Republic of Ireland, the Netherland­s, France, Belgium and Germany — with ripples across the entire economic and political bloc.

A snail’s pace on a deal has led Oliver Wyman Germany’s head Finja Carolin Kuetz to warn small companies could be especially hit by the new complexity of relations. “Over 60 per cent of exporting small and micro enterprise­s in Germany only trade within the EU and have no processes for trading outside Europe,” Kuetz said.

No deal would mean Britons would face a €32 billion shortfall. And across the EU27, the cost would be €39 billion, with ripples across the entire economic and political bloc.

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