With the Paris Auto Show preparing to open, and British industry leaders gathering there Wednesday to boast of the strength of their brands, Britain's EU exit, or Brexit, remains vexing in part because it's still not clear exactly how the complex and highly globalized auto trade will be affected.
Most expect Brexit to be disruptive, and to raise costs for companies, but the hard talk negotiations between Britain and the EU on the crucial issues of tariffs and the free movement of labor are still months away and will possibly take years to resolve.
"You won't think at the moment of investing in Britain," said Stefan Bratzel, director of the Center of Automotive Management in Bergisch, Germany. "You need stability, you want to know you are investing in a stable environment, and you don't have it."
Also Read
Bratzel said carmakers do not know how much production costs will surge, and whether the increases, possibly in the form of higher tariffs, will end Britain's attractiveness as a platform for building cars and getting them into the European market.
The immediate impact, he said, has been the reluctance of major companies like BMW to put more money into operations.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content