Joe Egerton: Fixing the exit date: A terrible gamble

14 November 2017

The proposal to amend the European Union Withdrawal Bill to specify the date and time on which the United Kingdom will leave the European Union – 11.00PM on 29th March 2019i- is a terrible gamble, writes Joe Egerton.

The gamble that the Prime Minister is taking is that whatever happens – including a breakdown in negotiations and the hardest of hard Brexits – by 11.00PM on 28th March 2019 the United Kingdom and the EU 27 will have taken all steps to avoid any catastrophic breakdown in arrangements in Europe. These include the UK, the EU and potentially individual member states passing any necessary legislation to preserve existing contracts (including their enforceability), to maintain arbitration mechanisms and maintain the legality of providing banking and insurance sectors across borders.
 
Neither the Bank of England (including the Prudential Regulatory Authority or PRA) nor the ECB know precisely what the value of derivatives held by banks and potentially affected by Brexit is. No stress tests have been conducted and none planned to find out whether the banks are adequately prepared for the hardest of hard Brexits on 29 March 2019. Actually nobody has tested to make sure that all the big banks have done enough to be sure that even a softer Brexit will not cause huge disruption.
 
The Bank of England has stated that there are:
 
The amendment will remove the present flexibility on the date on which the Treaties stop working.
 
If preparations are not complete by the point the UK leaves the EU then:
 
Up to now, everyone has assumed that however hard the Brexit everyone will agree to the steps
needed to avoid these potentially catastrophic consequences. But one reason why that assumption could be made is that Article 50 allows for the Treaties to kept in force if some of the steps necessary have to be completed. Take away that flexibility and the risks of catastrophe clearly increase.
 
What is worse firms will have to evaluate their risk exposures on the assumption that the UK will
inevitably leave on 29 March 2019 even if the necessary steps to keep the financial system operating have not been completed. That means they will have to provide for this risk. That means there is a risk of a credit crunch and a substantial diminution in the capacity of the insurance markets occurring well before 29 March 2019.
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