Gulf News

Brexit to cost UK 5,000 financial services jobs

Financial services minister says fully expects Britain to secure Brexit deal

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Despite thousands of jobs set to move to the continent due to Brexit, Britain’s financial services minister said yesterday he would do all he can to ensure the City of London remains a major financial centre.

John Glen told lawmakers that he agreed with Bank of England estimates that 5,000 financial services jobs will have moved to continenta­l Europe by the time Britain is due to leave the European Union next March.

Unsure of Britain’s future trading relations with the EU, financial firms in the UK are looking to open hubs in Paris, Frankfurt and elsewhere by March, and Glen singled out France for trying to exploit uncertaint­y over Brexit.

While acknowledg­ing there had not yet been “wholesale moves of large institutio­ns” to other cities, Glen said: “Clearly we are in a dynamic negotiatio­n where the French in particular have sought to leverage as much advantage due to the uncertaint­y.”

Reuters reported last month that as few as 630 UKbased finance jobs had already been shifted or created overseas with just six months to go before Brexit. France has said it expects London to remain a major financial centre.

Glen said he “fully expects” that Britain and the EU will agree on a deal that would introduce a transition period from next March to avoid a disorderly Brexit.

While the BoE said on Tuesday it was committed to “robust” standards, Glen told the lawmakers there was a need to oversee the City in a way that “prizes competitiv­eness”. Britain’s regulatory bodies would be reviewed in the next two years, he added.

Revenues

Britain’s financial sector generates more than £70 billion (Dh338 billion) in tax revenues, with the EU its biggest single export market.

Glen said the focus was on securing a bilateral agreement with the EU to inject certainty into the bloc’s existing system of financial market access known as equivalenc­e.

Equivalenc­e, used by Singapore, Japan and the United States, refers to Brussels granting market access to foreign banks and insurers if their home rules are aligned enough with those in force in the bloc. Britain, however, wants a bilateral agreement with the EU to restrain Brussels from scrapping financial market access at short notice, Glen said.

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 ?? AP ?? From left: IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, WTO Director-General Roberto Azevêdo and OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría at the IMF-World Bank meeting in Bali yesterday. Pakistan is likely to seek an IMF bailout as its economy falters.
AP From left: IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, WTO Director-General Roberto Azevêdo and OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría at the IMF-World Bank meeting in Bali yesterday. Pakistan is likely to seek an IMF bailout as its economy falters.

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