Daily Mail

Bullying Britain over a Brexit deal will backfire on EU, says Porsche boss

- From Ray Massey Motoring Editor in Stuttgart

BULLYING Britain over Brexit could cost German jobs and lead to ‘big trouble’ for the eU, a Porsche executive warned yesterday.

Bosses at the German sports car maker have told the eU’s free trade commission­er that punishing the UK for leaving the bloc could backfire.

They said imposing tariffs and customs barriers would make German cars more expensive to export to the highly profitable UK market.

In a public interventi­on that breaks ranks with many other european businesses, Lutz Meschke, Porsche’s executive board deputy chairman and finance chief, said it was in the eU’s interests to forge a free trade deal with Britain.

he revealed he had voiced his company’s concerns to european Commission­er elzbieta Bienkowska, who is responsibl­e for internal markets, industry, free trade and entreprene­urship.

Mr Meschke said: ‘If the eU decides to stay completely negative in the negotiatio­ns, it will be very difficult to keep the price level for imports of goods to the UK at a stable level. You will have customs tariffs. It will make things difficult.’

he added: ‘Imposed trade tariffs will push up the price, weaken demand for Porsche cars in the UK, and ultimately put German jobs at risk. It’s an absolute must that both sides must reach a good compromise.’

The UK is Porsche’s fourth largest market after China, the US and Germany. Last year it sold 14,051 cars in the UK, up 7 per cent on 2016. Cars sold in Britain also have some of the highest mark-ups as customers add many extras. The firm’s stance will be a boost to British businesses, many of which have argued that european companies would also be hit if the eU imposed tight imports and export controls after Brexit.

The UK is a major importer of German goods, with £69.5billion flowing into the country in 2017. By contrast Germany imported around 50 per cent less – some £37.3billion goods – from the UK.

Brexiteers argue that countries such as Germany need UK trade and that, despite eU rhetoric, businesses do not want to be hit by tariffs. Of the eU’s aggressive stance on Brexit talks, Mr Meschke said: ‘Towards the public, they have to create the image of being a tough negotiator. I hope they will find a good compromise and do not treat each other as enemies.’

Porsche would like tariff-free trade and a relationsh­ip similar to that between the eU and Norway. ‘Free trade is a must for developing industry,’ Mr Meschke added. ‘If we don’t have free trade conditions in future we will have big trouble … I talked to the european Union Commission­er about this. We can’t create a new trade war … We don’t want a position where punishing Britain will cost German and european jobs.’

This week the German Associatio­n of the Automotive Industry, representi­ng firms such as BMW and Porsche’s parent company Volkswagen, said regulation­s flowing from anything other than a comprehens­ive Brexit deal would ‘significan­tly burden’ trade with the UK. Individual companies have been less forthcomin­g about speaking out, although BMW has said that its British-based operations will remain crucial after Brexit.

÷Brussels has told Theresa May she must back plans to split Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK if she wants to secure a Brexit ‘transition’ deal by next week.

The eU is demanding that the Prime Minister publicly retreats from her previous insistence that the proposals were unacceptab­le.

‘Free trade is a must’

 ??  ?? Warning: Lutz Meschke, right, in Stuttgart yesterday
Warning: Lutz Meschke, right, in Stuttgart yesterday

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