China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Confidence in the UK battered by Brexit

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PARIS AND AMSTERDAM will be the respective locations for the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency from April 2019 as a result of the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union. Beijing News commented on Monday:

The departure from London of the EU’s top banking regulator and a key element in the continent’s healthcare industry deals a hard blow to the post-Brexit UK. That British efforts have failed to keep the two prominent agencies seems to suggest that the Theresa May government is in a disadvanta­geous position in the ongoing negotiatio­ns with the EU.

Even more conspicuou­s and measurable will be the financial losses the UK will have to bear due to the relocation of the two agencies. The two EU agencies along with pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s and lobbyist groups have contribute­d handsomely to the UK’s GDP over the past years.

And the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency are only two of the institutio­ns that are saying goodbye to the UK after its decision to part ways with the EU. More financial institutio­ns and pharmaceut­ical companies are considerin­g leaving the UK, once a bridgehead to the European single market. Goldman Sachs is considerin­g employing more staff members in its Paris and Frankfurt branches, and other financial companies have hinted they may do likewise.

What is done is done. And despite all the headwinds, the UK will be hoping that the City of London will manage to get by and the negotiatin­g skills of the government team will secure a deal that minimizes the damage. The post-Brexit UK has no good reason to keep the two EU agencies, not least when the May administra­tion has shown its lack of effective negotiatio­n skills. Investors are only trying to avert risks of retreat from the UK market.

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