Cape Times

KPMG ISSUES A WARNING

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WITH JUST 40 days until the UK is due to leave the EU, businesses are testing their emergency Brexit preparatio­ns to ensure they have enough cash and staff in the event of a disorderly exit, KPMG said. Unless Prime Minister Theresa May can get a Brexit deal approved by the British parliament, she will have to decide whether to delay Brexit or thrust the world’s fifth-largest economy into chaos by leaving without a deal on March 29. “Businesses are now testing the airbags on their Brexit preparatio­ns,” said James Stewart, the head of Brexit at KPMG UK. “Time is a luxury we no longer have, so people are bracing themselves for the immediate potential impacts. After a slew of poor economic data, and Brexit uncertaint­y stretching a long way beyond the point most people had anticipate­d, the mood of business is darkening,” Stewart said. Unless there is a deal or a delay, the UK will leave the EU without a transition period abruptly on March 29, a step that is almost certain to disrupt trade and spook markets. With fears growing that the political brinkmansh­ip in London could lead to Britain leaving without a deal, businesses and the EU’s executive have ramped up planning for such an eventualit­y. KPMG said its sees the probabilit­y of the UK leaving with a Brexit deal of some kind at about 55 percent; the chances of a no-deal Brexit at about 30 percent; and the chances of no Brexit at 15 percent. The Bank of England has said the hit to the economy from a disorderly Brexit could be harder than that of the global financial crisis a decade ago. Brexit supporters say although there may be some short-term disruption, in the long term the UK will thrive outside what they cast as a doomed experiment in Germandomi­nated unity that is falling far behind the US and China. I Reuters

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