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07 April 2016

CEPS: Britain’s Future in Europe - The known Plan A to remain or the unknown Plan B to leave


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The authors set out three Plan Bs more concretely and in more depth than the ‘leave’ camp has been able or wanted to do, or any other source has done.


Stage 1. Evidence on the Workings of the EU

[...] The evidence produced by the Balance of Competences Review showed in fact that the sharing of competences between the EU and the member states has mostly been refined through years of negotiation and experience to the point of reaching plausible balances. The argument that the European Union is ‘unreformable’ was shown to be simplistic and untrue. 

On the contrary, the reform and policy improvement agenda – past, present and future – is evident in almost every policy domain. The EU now gives increasing priority to weeding out unnecessary ‘red tape’, with a new top-level appointment at the European Commission to oversee this effort, which corresponds to a key British demand.

The amount of EU-based legislation adopted by national parliaments needs an objective perspective. A thorough study conducted by the House of Common showed that 6.8% of UK primary legislation and 14.1% of UK secondary legislation had a role in implementing EU law, in marked contrast to allegations made in various political speeches citing figures as high as 75% – without referencing any serious source. [...]

Stage 2. Negotiations and the Referendum

[...] The ‘remain’ choice (Plan A) is fully known, consisting of the status quo, as marginally improved under Cameron’s four points. These improvements could only be marginal because basically the UK is already ‘in’ what it likes (the single market and a full role in foreign policy and political affairs), and ‘out’ of what it does not like (the euro and Schengen), and has special deals on other important matters (the budget and justice and police cooperation). 

Plan B, or the terms of secession, in the immortal words of Sherlock Holmes, is “the dog that did not bark”. The ‘leave’ choice is unknown territory [...] Three Plan Bs are defined, which span a range of views.

Plan B.1 corresponds to one popular sentiment to get out simply and fast, with a clean break on Day 1. This would mean scrapping all EU law, including all its international agreements, and thus create initially a huge legal void that would be unthinkably catastrophic for the economy. No British government would conceivably do this. Consequently, there can be no quick clean break.

Plan B.2 consists of quitting politically while staying within the single market and/or the customs union, and thus minimising economic disruption. This could be workable, since the mechanisms already exist and have been tested with some other non-EU countries. The problem here, however, is that it would mean still taking on a lot of EU policy without having a say in its making, i.e. a loss of sovereignty compared to Plan A (‘no say, still pay’, as some have dubbed it).

Plan B.3 therefore sees the UK trying to negotiate the best possible deals with the EU and its international trading partners. This however becomes a very messy prospect, with years and years of negotiation lying ahead in a climate of uncertainty over the outcome. The UK’s preferred deal with the EU would aim at maximum freedom of action including an end to the free movement of people, but at the same time retaining maximum continued access to the EU market for goods and services. Negotiations with the EU towards this end, however, would be very problematic, encountering predictable objections to this ‘cherry-picking’ approach. As a result, the UK economy would risk losing both its two ‘crown jewels’ – namely the preeminent position of the City in financial markets and the UK’s rank as the preferred location for foreign investment aimed at the EU market. Moreover, the idea of the UK replacing the EU’s international free trade deals with something better and faster is an illusion, since major trading powers will continue to view the EU as their priority, as our analysis shows in some detail.

The overall conclusion is that all three Plan Bs fail to come up with something preferable to Plan A, as a matter of cold calculation of concrete costs and benefits.

To this should be added the certainty that under all the Plan Bs the UK would lose status in international affairs in the eyes of the rest of the world. It would also inflict huge damage on the entire European project that has for half a century delivered peace and prosperity to the continent, a seemingly miraculous achievement after the preceding half-century of the worst hell that the modern ‘civilised’ world ever witnessed.

Last but certainly not least, Brexit could also destroy the UK itself, leading quite possibly to Scottish secession, alongside the risks also of unsettling the peaceful status quo of Northern Ireland in relation to the Republic.

Full CEPS paperback



© CEPS - Centre for European Policy Studies


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