PM Johnson says it's time to prepare for no-trade deal Brexit

Unless Brussels changed course there would be no agreement, says Johnson

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, PHOTO: AFP/FILE

LONDON:

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Friday it was now time to prepare for a no-trade deal Brexit in 10 weeks as the European Union had refused to negotiate seriously, adding that unless Brussels changed course there would be no agreement.

A tumultuous “no deal” finale to the United Kingdom’s five-year Brexit crisis would sow chaos through the delicate supply chains that stretch across Britain, the EU and beyond - just as the economic hit from the coronavirus pandemic worsens.

At what was supposed to be the “Brexit summit” on Thursday, the EU delivered an ultimatum: it said it was concerned by a lack of progress and called on London to yield on key sticking points or see a rupture of ties with the bloc from Jan. 1.

“I have concluded that we should get ready for January 1 with arrangements that are more like Australia’s based on simple principles of global free trade,” Johnson said.

“With high hearts and with complete confidence, we will prepare to embrace the alternative and we will prosper mightily as an independent free-trading nation, controlling and setting our own laws,” he added.

Johnson’s remarks, which follow an EU demand that London make further concessions, may push Brexit towards chaos, though he still left open the possibility that the EU could change course and offer Britain a better deal.

“Unless there is a fundamental change of approach, we’re going to go for the Australia solution. And we should do it with great confidence,” he said.

Asked if he was walking away from talks, Johnson said: “If there’s a fundamental change of approach, of course we always willing to listen, but it didn’t seem particularly encouraging from the summit in Brussels.”

In Brussels, an EU official and a diplomat told Reuters the bloc was still preparing for more trade talks in Britain next week.

“He didn’t say they will leave the negotiating table. So it’s all just rhetoric. He didn’t say they won’t keep on talking. So they will,” the diplomat said.

The EU official said bloc’s EU’s Brexit negotiating team was “already packing for an intense week in London”, adding: “On the whole Australia deal/Canada deal revival...it’s just not serious.”

Sterling plunges

Sterling dropped sharply after Johnson’s remarks that businesses, hauliers and travellers should get ready for a clean break from Europe.

At 1101 GMT, the pound was down 0.1% against the dollar at $1.2882 GBP=D3, having been up at $1.2962 before Johnson spoke. It was down 0.2% versus the euro. EURGBP=D3

Britain formally left the EU on Jan. 31 this year, but a transition period, which ends on Dec. 31, means it remains in the EU single market and customs union.

The two sides have been haggling over a deal that would govern trade in everything from car parts and salmon to Camembert and medicines when that informal membership ends.

'No deal' on WTO terms

A so-called “Australia deal” means that the United Kingdom would trade on World Trade Organisation terms: as a third country like Australia, tariffs would be imposed under WTO rules.

“It’s becoming clear the EU don’t want to do the type of Canada deal that we originally asked for,” Johnson said. “It does seem curious that after 45 years of our membership they can offer Canada terms they won’t offer us.”

EU officials have said Britain, with the world’s xth largest economy posing a much bigger competitive challenge than distant Canada, is geographically too close to Europe to offer London a Canada-style deal.

Johnson had repeatedly asserted that his preference is for a deal but that Britain could make a success of a no-deal scenario, which would throw $900 billion in annual bilateral trade into uncertainty and could snarl the border, turning the southeastern county of Kent into a vast truck park.

The EU’s 27 members, whose combined $18.4 trillion economy dwarfs the United Kingdom’s $3 trillion economy, say a deal is still possible but that Johnson must give ground.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Europe’s most powerful leader, said after the summit that compromise would be needed for a deal.

“In some areas, things have progressed well. In others, much work remains to be done. We have asked the United Kingdom to remain open to compromise, so that an agreement can be reached,” Merkel said.

“This of course means that we, too, will need to make compromises. Each side has its red lines,” she said, adding that the top EU objectives were to safeguard peace in Ireland and protect the bloc’s single market.

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