Britain, EU split over financial market access
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[February 11, 2020] By
Huw Jones and Marine Strauss
LONDON/
STRASBOURG (Reuters) - Britain wants
a stable relationship with the European Union for "decades to come" in
financial services, Britain's finance minister Sajid Javid said on
Tuesday, but received an instant rebuttal from Brussels.
Britain left the EU last month and its large financial services sector
will lose privileged access to EU customers from January 2021. Financial
firms would be able to service those clients only in sub-sectors where
rules are deemed "equivalent".
Javid called on the EU to find Britain's financial sector "equivalent",
a reference to the bloc's system of financial market access, based on
Brussels acknowledging that UK regulation is as robust as the EU's
rules.
"This is important not only in the short term, but to establish the
norms and ways of working with the EU that will endure for decades to
come," Javid said in an article in City AM newspaper.
Replying to a lawmaker's question later in parliament, Javid said the EU
should continue to recognize the UK as meeting the EU's equivalent
regulatory standards because "on day one (Jan. 1, 2021) we will have
exactly the same rules".
However, EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier told EU lawmakers
that Britain should be "under no illusion" on financial services as
there would be "no general, global, permanent equivalence" with Britain.
"There will be no common management," Barnier told the European
Parliament in Strasbourg.
Equivalence only covers some financial activities, basic banking is
excluded, and Brussels can in theory scrap access with just 30 days'
notice in some cases.
Britain and the EU have agreed to make such an assessment by the end of
June, but Brussels has said actual financial market access will be
linked to broader trade issues, such as fishing rights.
NO MORE CUTTING AND PASTING EU RULES
An unverified photo of a government briefing paper on equivalence taken
outside Javid's Downing Street office by PoliticalPics on Monday spoke
of "comprehensive, permanent equivalence decisions" as an opening
position for Britain.
[to top of second column] |
Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid arrives to attend
a cabinet meeting held at the National Glass Centre at the
University of Sunderland, in Sunderland, Britain January 31, 2020.
Paul Ellis/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Equivalence is used by countries such as Singapore, the United States
and Japan, but it has never been applied before to a huge financial
center on the EU's doorstep. The bloc has been toughening up conditions
for equivalence ahead of Brexit.
Brussels has also made clear that if equivalence is granted for trading,
clearing or other financial activities, its regulators would closely
supervise UK rules to ensure it was staying aligned to those in the
bloc.
Faced with uncertainty over equivalence, financial firms in Britain have
opened hubs in the EU to avoid being cut off or having reduced access.
Javid said Britain would no longer be a "rule taker", meaning it will
not continue to cut and paste EU financial regulations into UK law as it
did while a member of the bloc.
More broadly, the EU is prepared to offer Britain unrivalled access to
its single market in a trade deal with zero tariffs and quotas, but has
insisted that any such rights would have to come with obligations to
ensure fair competition.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said she was
encouraged by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's ambition on social
and environmental standards and that these could form the basis of
'level playing field' obligations between the EU and Britain.
(Additional reporting by Francesco Guarascio and Philip Blenkinsop in
Brussels and David Milliken in London, editing by Ed Osmond and Gareth
Jones)
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