Bloomberg: Most UK firms are still unprepared for Brexit, survey finds

28 September 2018

Most British firms are unprepared for Brexit, but a fifth plan to move all or some of their business to the European Union in the event the U.K. fails to reach a deal with the bloc, according to one of the biggest surveys so far on the topic, carried out by the British Chambers of Commerce.

Some 62 percent of companies are yet to carry out a Brexit risk assessment, according to the survey published Friday by the British Chambers of Commerce. Their poll of more than 2,500 companies also found that 21 percent of businesses would cut investment in the U.K. in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

The findings are a wake-up call for the government, underlining the lack of preparation in corporate Britain and the potential economic damage that would result from a chaotic Brexit. Prime Minister Theresa May’s proposal was rejected by European leaders last week, forcing her to come up with a new Brexit plan both the EU and the warring factions in her Conservative Party can accept.

“Businesses are clear that reaching a deal with the EU, which addresses the future terms of trade and provides certainty, must be the government’s number one priority,” BCC Director-General Adam Marshall said in a statement. “Our evidence is clear: failure to reach a political agreement would have real-world consequences, with significant decreases in both investment and recruitment.” [...]

Full article on Bloomberg

British Chambers of Commerce survey


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