Hindustan Times (East UP)

EU-UK trade talks continue, no Brexit breakthrou­gh yet

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Problems increased on Monday in the bid to put a trade deal between the European Union and the United Kingdom on the rails before a Brexit transition period ends on New Year’s Day, with the EU legislatur­e insisting ever more it will not have time to vet and approve an agreement.

British and EU negotiator­s were still deadlocked over fishing rights on Monday with only 10 days to go before a chaotic, costly economic break between both sides is to become official.

Barring a late breakthrou­gh, it would impose tariffs on trade between the sides, on top of the customs and other administra­tive red tape imposed by Britain’s decision to leave the 27-nation bloc.

Hundreds of thousands of jobs are at stake on both sides if no deal is found but Britain is still insisting its sovereignt­y trumps concession­s granting EU vessels rights in UK waters, while the EU is refusing to open its lucrative single market to the UK unless it commits to play by EU rules. On Monday, EU legislator­s were mulling their next moves now that both sides had ignored their Sunday deadline they imposed for having enough time to assess any agreement.

The legislatur­e’s chief Brexit official, German lawmaker David McAllister, said that the parliament “has done its utmost to be in a position to grant consent before the end of the transition period and is committed to take any step that minimises disruption­s for our citizens and businesses.” He was meeting with parliament President David Sassoli to plot the next steps.

Meanwhile, the tiny, yet complex sector of fisheries continued to befuddle the negotiator­s, while most of the other issues that had long divided both sides now seemed within reach of agreement.

The stalemate has left the overall talks inconclusi­ve, with businesses on both sides clamouring for a deal that would save tens of billions in costs. One official from an EU coastal nation said the EU was refusing to yield more than a quarter of the fishing quotas the bloc stands to lose now that Britain is regaining full control of its waters due to Brexit. Britain is also steadfast that a three-year transition period would be long enough for EU fishermen to adapt to the new rules, while the EU wants at least six years.

A failure to reach a postBrexit deal would lead to more chaos on Britain’s borders with the EU at the start of 2021, when new tariffs would add to other impediment­s to trade enacted by both sides.

The talks have bogged down on two main issues in the past — the EU’s access to UK fishing waters and assurances of fair competitio­n between businesses. A trade deal would ensure there are no tariffs and quotas on trade in goods between the two sides, but there would still be technical costs, partly associated with customs checks and nontariff barriers on services.

 ??  ?? An anti-government protester reacts as police fire tear gas during a rally in Hong Kong on November 2, 2019.
An anti-government protester reacts as police fire tear gas during a rally in Hong Kong on November 2, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India