The government’s trade bill has its second reading on Tuesday, something which has gone unnoticed by many campaigners and commentators, let alone the wider population. And that’s a problem. Anyone who cares about democracy, our nation’s prosperity and the future of post-Brexit Britain, should care deeply. It is nowhere near as innocuous as it sounds. It’s a Trojan horse.
The City’s top financial watchdog has said there is no reason why financial services should be excluded from a post-Brexit free trade agreement between the UK and the EU.
The EU recently proposed a single trade agreement with the United States, so there is no reason it cannot have one with the UK post-Brexit, according to the chief executive of the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
It has become clear, if it wasn’t before, that there is a fundamental choice between pursuing progressive policies and a hard Brexit. Rather than enabling Corbyn’s Britain – the regulations, state aid and nationalisation desired by many on the Left – a hard Brexit could derail these visions. Leaving the EU isn’t just going to consume government and parliament now, it is likely to dominate the next decade, politically and financially constraining any government in the future.
As many people suspected, and as is becoming more and more obvious, the UK, with its sweatshop economy, weak productivity and huge trade deficit, is going to find itself in very chilly waters after we leave the EU
Die britische Premierministerin Theresa May strebt mit der Europäischen Union ein umfassendes Freihandelsabkommen nach dem Austritt aus der Staatengemeinschaft an. Die Erfahrungen der vergangenen Jahre mit derartigen Vereinbarungen deuten auf schwierige, langjährige Verhandlungen sowie einen komplexen Ratifizierungsprozess hin.
Trotz sinkender Chancen für einen erfolgreichen Abschluss der TTIP Verhandlungen hält Cecilia Malmström an der nächsten geplanten Verhandlungsrunde fest.
Viele EU-Beamte müssen sich jetzt um den Austritt Großbritanniens kümmern. Die TTIP-Verhandlungen werden dadurch - zumindest - verzögert. Der gemeinsame Markt wird kleiner, die Kommission verliert an Verhandlungsmasse: Der Austritt der Briten aus der EU hat auf die TTIP-Verhandlungen mit den USA mehr Einfluss als sich die Verhandler wünschen. Nicht zuletzt schwächt er die Position der Europäer im Verhandlungspoker. Sechs Antworten auf die drängendsten Fragen.
Clinching an ambitious bilateral trade and investment pact in the near term remains a key strategic and economic priority, said the US’ and EU’s top trade officials last week, while acknowledging the ongoing uncertainty that surrounds such efforts given the American presidential election debate on the merits of trade deals and the impending “Brexit” referendum in the UK.