Business Standard

Britain looks at paying into EU budget after Brexit, too

Move will keep single-market access to London and other sectors

Theresa May

Theresa May

Guy Faulconbridge London
Britain might continue to pay billions of pounds into the European Union's budget after Brexit to maintain single-market access for the City of London and other sectors under plans being discussed by government, the Financial Times reported.

Prime Minister Theresa May's recent rhetoric has perturbed some investors who fear Britain could give up trying to remain in the EU's single market in order to impose controls on immigration from the other 27 EU member states. But the Financial Times said on Monday, May had not ruled out making future payments to the EU to secure privileged access to the single market. Finance is among the sectors most likely to benefit in any deal that recognised the "equivalence" of regulatory regimes, the FT said. The FT said that May assured Japanese carmaker Nissan that trading conditions for its British car plant would not change after Brexit, the first suggestion that the government could pick certain sectors to shield from the impact of leaving the EU.
 
Continued payments into the EU after Brexit has long been seen by Eurosceptics as a possible way to keep some preferential access to EU markets while pulling more sovereignty back to London over areas such as migration.

UK OUT OF TOP 5 INVESTMENT SITES
  • The UK dropped out of businesses' top five locations for investments for the first time in seven years as fears about the country's plans to exit the EU added complexity to international deals
  • British businesses rank behind investments in the US, China, Germany, Canada and France, which make-up the top destinations for deals activity based on a survey of more than 1,700 executives in 45 countries in August, September
  • There's been about $208 bn in M&A involving UK firms announced this year. That's down 55% from the same period a year ago
  • Worldwide, M&A spending has reached $2.2 trillion, down about 20% from last year's record
  • Still, 57% of the companies expect to pursue deals in the next year
  • In July, Japan's SoftBank Group agreed to buy Cambridge, England-based chip designer ARM Holdings for $30 bn in cash
  • Newbury, England-based Micro Focus International agreed to merge with some assets spun off from Hewlett Packard in September in a deal valued at about $8.8 bn

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First Published: Oct 17 2016 | 11:59 PM IST

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