Cyprus Today

The EU offers UK limited trade deal

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THE EU on Wednesday offered Britain a free trade deal for their post-Brexit ties that fell well short of ambitions set out by Prime Minister Theresa May last week, notably for the country’s dominant financial sector.

In a draft proposal, the remaining 27 European Union members said they wanted a close partnershi­p with Britain, but its depth would be limited by Britain’s own wish to leave the bloc’s single market and the customs union.

“Because of Brexit, we will be drifting apart,” the chairman of EU leaders Donald Tusk told a news conference, delivering a message that contrasted sharply with Mrs May’s call for future trade to be as “frictionle­ss as possible”.

Referring to what he called the first free trade deal ever to loosen economic ties, he said it would make bilateral trade “more complicate­d and costly than today, for all of us.”

Mr Tusk said that, while he understood Mrs May’s goal to make Brexit a success for Britain, that was not the EU’s objective.

Crucially, the bloc said Britain would be treated like any other third country when it came to financial services, which London had pressed to be included in the future deal.

Financial services generate more than 10 per cent of Britain’s economic output and are the only area in which it has a trade surplus with the EU, making London very keen to preserve its banks’ current access to continenta­l Europe.

But the text said in the future, Britain’s financial firms would only be allowed to operate in the EU “under host state rules”, reflecting “the fact that the UK will become a third country and the Union and the UK will no longer share a common regulatory, supervisor­y, enforcemen­t and judiciary framework.”

In a sign some large banks may be losing patience with the protracted uncertaint­y about the future, Goldman Sachs has put more than a dozen UKbased banking, sales and trading staff on notice to move to Frankfurt within weeks.

That is one of the first tangible signs that banks are starting to act on Brexit contingenc­y plans to keep what the EU calls passportin­g rights, the possibilit­y to offer services to all EU clients via just one local licence.

British Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond called the EU guidelines a very tough position that any skilled negotiator would start with.

While the EU says it does not want to mete out punishment to Britain, the trade deal offer will come as another blow to Britain. The bloc has also recently outlined its contingenc­y plans for avoiding an Irish border after Brexit, which Britain said would undermine its constituti­onal sovereignt­y.

With no passportin­g rights for its banks, the best option London can hope for is regulatory equivalenc­e, under which they can get more access to the EU market if British financial rules, though not identical to EU ones, are seen by the bloc as achieving the same goals.

But Mr Hammond said the EU’s third country equivalenc­e regime would be wholly inadequate, and criticised the only patchy access it gives, as well as the possibilit­y of revoking it at short notice.

He said a better solution would be mutual recognitio­n and reciprocal equivalenc­e, with sensible notice periods.

He also argued that Britain and the EU could reach a much better agreement on financial services than the EU had reached with Canada. Canadian financial firms must set up a presence inside the bloc and comply with its regulation­s if they want to do business there. The draft EU guidelines, which will be worked on by diplomats to be approved by the bloc’s 27 national leaders in late March, say services will be part of the deal, but spell out clear limits of what can be on offer.

“Such an agreement cannot offer the same benefits as membership and cannot amount to participat­ion in the Single Market or parts thereof,” the text read.

Mr Tusk did say services would be covered in the future arrangemen­t with London but stressed: “No member state is free to pick only those sectors of the single market it likes. By the same token, a pick-and-mix approach for a non-member state is out of the question.”

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