Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

03 November 2017

Brexit Transition – is there a Plan B?


The latest ONS annual Pink Book on the UK’s balance of payments shows a further deterioration of the current account balance mainly driven by a “trade” deficit of a 7% of GPD. So the UK is becoming ever more reliant on the “kindness of strangers”, in BoE Governor Carney’s deft phrase.

Time is not on the UK’s side in these negotiations: The latest ONS annual Pink Book on the UK’s balance of payments shows a further deterioration of the current account to 6% of GDP (£114 billion) in 2016. The traded goods deficit was only partially offset by a massive surplus on services– mainly financial. It is this financial surplus that is so clearly at risk from an inadequate transition, but any impact on goods exports will underline the UK’s precarious position as they only cover 70% of our imports.

So the UK is becoming ever more reliant on the kindness of strangers- in BoE Governor Carney’s deft phrase. This acute vulnerability is only likely to be exacerbated by the debates on exactly what transition means, and how long it might last.

  • No Brexit at all– the Article 50 notification of intention to quit can be rescinded, and all the evidence is that EU27 would still welcome that.
  • EU27’s Prolongation superficially resembles May’s Implementation:  Could this be Plan B? But the UK’s politics seem to make it dead in the water, especially when answering the PM’s question “what happens when one of us wants to make changes.” She paid scant attention to the inconvenient fact that the EU27 is 6-7 times the size of the UK.

In the next few weeks, an agreement must be found on the divorce arrangements, or the cliff edge is clearly in sight. But if history is any guide, the strangers who are kindly funding our huge excess of imports are likely to panic well before we go over the cliff. The consequences of such a currency panic will bring Britain’s electors face-to-face with grim reality. Brexit may well not happen at all.

Full article available for consultancy clients here



© Graham Bishop


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment