Seeming to contradict some of the "hard" Brexit rhetoric espoused at the start of negotiations with the EU on Monday, finance minister Philip Hammond and Bank of England governor Mark Carney stressed the perils of an abrupt divorce from Britain's biggest trading market.
Carney even mocked Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson's argument that Britain can have its cake and eat it by quitting the European Union but still retaining the benefits of membership.
"Depending on whether and when any transition arrangement can be agreed, firms on either side of the channel may soon need to activate contingency plans," the governor cautioned.
The central bank chief, to the ire of some Brexiteers, has long argued that Britain should proceed on a smoother glide path out of the EU by agreeing transitional rules for its banks and companies.
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While Brexit minister David Davis on Monday stressed that Britain would have to quit the EU's common market and customs union, Hammond agreed with Carney on the need for a transitional deal "to avoid unnecessary disruption and dangerous cliff edges".
Ensuring that Brexit does not imperil British jobs or impoverish living standards "will require every ounce of skill and diplomacy that we can muster", he said.
"Yesterday was a positive start. It will get tougher," the chancellor of the exchequer added.
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