The Jerusalem Post

EU single-market membership worth 4% to British GDP, think tank says

- • By KYLIE MACLELLAN

LONDON (Reuters) – Maintainin­g membership of the European Union’s single market when Britain leaves the bloc could be worth 4 percent to the size of the UK economy, a leading economic think tank said in a report on Wednesday.

Britain is yet to begin formal talks with the EU about its future relationsh­ip. But retaining access to the single market, particular­ly for financial services, will be a key part of the negotiatio­ns.

EU leaders have insisted that full access to the single market must be accompanie­d by the right of EU citizens to live and work in Britain, a step too far for many Brexit backers.

Compared to World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) membership alone, maintainin­g single-market membership as part of the European Economic Area could be worth 4% of GDP, the Institute for Fiscal Studies estimated.

“From an economic point of view, we still face some very big choices indeed in terms of our future relationsh­ip with the EU,” said Ian Mitchell, IFS research associate and author of the report. “There is all the difference in the world between ‘access to’ and ‘membership of’ the single market.”

“Membership is likely to offer significan­t economic benefits, particular­ly for trade in services,” he said. “But outside the EU, single-market membership also comes at the cost of accepting future regulation­s designed in the EU without UK input. This may be seriously problemati­c for some parts of the financial-services sector.”

Single-market access is “virtually meaningles­s as a concept,” the IFS said, as any WTO country has access to the EU for exports. However, membership involves reducing nontariff barriers, such as regulatory constraint­s, in a way that no existing trade deal or customs union does, it said.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said last month that Britain would come out of the single market as a result of its June 23 vote to leave the EU. But he added that it must ensure single-market access for its financial-services industry.

Some lawyers in the City of London have said banks could access the single market by demonstrat­ing to Brussels that they comply with rules that are “equivalent” to those in the EU. But critics say granting equivalenc­e is in the hands of the EU.

Financial lobby groups have also begun arguing that access is a two-way street and that big companies on the continent would find it difficult in the short to medium term not to have access to the UK’s financial-services sector.

Without the so-called passportin­g that comes with single-market membership and allows financial-services firms in London to do business in Europe, a substantia­l portion of EU-related activity would consider moving elsewhere, IFS said.

“Anything short of actually being in the single market would mean that passportin­g was forgone, and these firms would be likely to need an EU-based subsidiary to service EU customers,” the report said. “Without membership... the UK would be likely to lose high-value economic activity and jobs.”

On Wednesday, the chief executive of M&G, the British asset-management arm of insurer Prudential, said Dublin and Luxembourg were alternativ­e options for domiciling funds.

 ?? (Neil Hall/Reuters) ?? A BUS passes the Bank of England in London last week. Britain is yet to begin formal talks with the EU about its future relationsh­ip. But retaining access to the single market, particular­ly for financial services, will be a key part of the negotiatio­ns.
(Neil Hall/Reuters) A BUS passes the Bank of England in London last week. Britain is yet to begin formal talks with the EU about its future relationsh­ip. But retaining access to the single market, particular­ly for financial services, will be a key part of the negotiatio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel