"Best guy to follow on Brexit for intelligent analysis" Annette Dittert, ARD German TV. "Consistently outstanding analysis of Brexit" Jonathan Dimbleby. "The best writer on Brexit" Chris Lockwood, Europe Editor, The Economist. "A must-read for anyone following Brexit" David Allen Green, FT. "The doyen of Brexit commentators" Chris Johns, Irish Times. @chrisgrey.bsky.social & Twitter @chrisgreybrexit
Pages
▼
Sunday, 4 September 2016
Japan's statement on Brexit
The Japanese
government today issued a very stark warning to the UK about the consequences
of Brexit. Described
by Sky News as “unprecedented”, the detailed statement made clear that
Japanese investment in the UK (which accounts for about half of all Japanese
investment in the EU) was contingent on a Brexit-lite type deal in which the UK
remains in the single market and accepts free movement of labour. Japan is
important to both manufacturing and services, having major stakes in both the car,
pharmaceutical and financial services sectors.
This is
highly significant, because the Brexit case has always discounted the impact on
foreign investment, insisting that warnings from Japan and other countries that
they would disinvest were just part of ‘Project Fear’. The statement is also important
because it links together (in its reference to “rules of origin”) UK membership
of the single market with UK access to the trade deals done by the EU, which would
cease to exist on exit, even Brexit-lite (because they are deals between the EU
and third parties, whereas Brexit-lite would mean EEA membership of the single
market, rather than EU membership).
For hardcore
Brexiters, any economic price is worth paying for hard Brexit. Is that likely
to be true for the British people as a whole? I doubt it. So Japan’s statement
surely ratchets up the pressure on Theresa May to deliver Brexit-lite, as the
least-worst form of Brexit.
No comments:
Post a Comment