Paul Goldschmidt: The Brexit negotiations

07 November 2016

The E.U. and the United Kingdom share one and the same priority, says Paul Goldschmidt: Preserve at all costs their respective integrity!

[...]whatever priorities and scope for compromise, advocated by Brexiteers with regard to repatriating the elements of sovereignty previously ceded to the EU, the paramount concern to which all other objectives are subordinated, is the preservation of the territorial integrity of the United Kingdom. [...]
 
Similarly, whatever the desires of some Member States to find specific – but different -  compromises with the U.K., the necessity of presenting a united front is the only position that can prevent the Union from splintering. The refusal of the 27 to engage in discussions prior to the Art. 50 notification is a promising omen.
 
From England’s point of view, there are only two possible strategies that can guarantee the integrity of the U.K.:
 

 
In developing its strategy, the EU must subordinate the success of Brexit negotiations to its overarching objective of maintaining the EU’s unity. This implies:
 

 
Great Britain must, however, face up to another problem: if the EU implodes, the purpose of negotiating Brexit disappears. While the country would be shielded from the additional difficulties endured by countries having adopted the €, it would nevertheless face the full force of the global repercussions of such an event. The reinstatement of even temporary but inescapable foreign exchange controls would impact the City of London far more profoundly than the loss of “passporting” rights or “equivalency” resulting from Brexit. A single example makes this clear: the disappearance of the € would kill the entire € clearing business costing tens of thousands of jobs and all related revenues. But, more importantly, it is the entire spectrum of the exceptional high quality services that the City of London offers its continental partners that would be jeopardized by a collapse of the demand (rather than the relocation of the providers), resulting from the fragmentation of the markets subsequent to the re-emergence of “sovereign” independent Nation-States.
 
From the EU’s standpoint, if it reforms while preserving the unity of its 27 members, it will have surmounted a major challenge that few observes, including the writer, believe it is capable of. In the event, however, the likelihood of the dismembering of the U.K. increases exponentially. This leads me to conclude that preserving simultaneously the integrity of the EU and the UK can only be achieved if the latter remains part of the EU. [...]

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