German firms would face billions in extra tariffs in
hard Brexit: study
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[October 09, 2018]
By Michelle Martin
BERLIN (Reuters) - German firms would face
extra tariffs of more than 3 billion euros ($3.4 billion) a year if
Britain quits the European Union without a trade deal, and their exports
to Britain might drop by up to 57 percent, Germany's IW institute said
on Tuesday.
Talks on ending four decades of Britain's membership in the European
Union have entered their final stage more than two years after Britons
voted for Brexit. A hard Brexit would mean Britain leaving the bloc with
no trade deal.
The BDI industry association - one of Germany's most influential lobby
groups - said a breakthrough in Brexit negotiations was needed at an
Oct. 17-18 summit in Brussels.
"Otherwise there is the risk that Europe slides into a disorderly Brexit
and that would cause a huge crisis," Managing Director Joachim Lang told
a news conference in Berlin.
A hard Brexit would cause huge difficulties for tens of thousands of
companies in Europe and hundreds of thousands of employees in Britain
and the European Union, Lang said.
He noted that many companies were preparing for a hard Brexit and some
wanted to suspend production in Britain from April as delivery routes
could not be secured and some were moving their headquarters from
Britain, adjusting their legal frameworks and looking for new transport
routes.
Lang said there was no overall figure for how much companies had spent
on preparing for Brexit but some individual pharmaceutical and chemical
companies had spent up to 100 million pounds ($130 million) preparing
for Brexit.
AUTO SECTOR TO SUFFER
A hard Brexit would affect the auto sector - which employs some 800,000
people in Germany and is the country's biggest exporter - particularly
hard as it would be hit with about 60 percent of the extra costs German
companies would face, IW said.
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An employee of German car manufacturer Porsche works on a Porsche
911 GT3 RS at the Porsche factory in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen,
Germany, January 26, 2018. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo
About 5 percent of Germany's gross domestic product depended either directly or
indirectly on trade with Britain, IW said, making it the third biggest trading
partner for German firms.
"That could dramatically change in the foreseeable future," the IW study said.
Referring to a potential plunge in German exports to Britain if a hard Brexit
happens, IW researcher Markos Jung said: "This horrific scenario should force
politicians to act constructively."
In the long term, a hard Brexit would probably result in price rises and a shift
in Germany's flow of goods, the IW said.
Lang said a transition period, which would only be possible with a Brexit deal,
was indispensable to enable German companies to adapt to the changes to the
legal framework that would come afterwards.
"A strong agreement with the EU is far more important for both sides, especially
for Britain, than the remote prospect of deals with third countries," he said.
(Editing by Louise Ireland)
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