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UK business groups Brexit exasperation: “It's time for Parliament to stop this circus”

Wednesday, March 13th 2019 - 07:26 UTC
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CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn said the extension of the Brexit process “should be as short as realistically possible and backed by a clear plan”. (Pic Reuters) CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn said the extension of the Brexit process “should be as short as realistically possible and backed by a clear plan”. (Pic Reuters)
Stephen Phipson, CEO of Make UK, said: ”It is now essential that Parliament brings the curtain down on this farce and removes the risk of no deal. Stephen Phipson, CEO of Make UK, said: ”It is now essential that Parliament brings the curtain down on this farce and removes the risk of no deal.
“That outcome would be disastrous for the UK manufacturing, jeopardizing many thousands of jobs in every constituency in the land.” “That outcome would be disastrous for the UK manufacturing, jeopardizing many thousands of jobs in every constituency in the land.”

Business groups are “exasperated” after the Prime Minister's EU withdrawal plan was again rejected by Parliament. They called on MPs to shut down the possibility of a no-deal Brexit and come up with a clear EU exit plan. The City UK, the finance industry body, said leaving without a deal “would be an own goal of historic proportions”.

The government is set to publish more details of its no-deal plans on Wednesday, including trade tariffs and Irish border proposals.

CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn said the extension of the Brexit process “should be as short as realistically possible and backed by a clear plan”.

“It's time for Parliament to stop this circus,” she added.

Stephen Phipson, chief executive of manufacturers' group Make UK, said: “It is now essential that Parliament brings the curtain down on this farce and removes the risk of no deal.

”That outcome would be disastrous for the UK manufacturing, jeopardizing many thousands of jobs in every constituency in the land.“

The government is set to publish more details of its no-deal plans, including tariff rates, on Wednesday.

Last week, reports suggested that should the UK leave the EU with no deal in place, the UK government might cut trade tariffs on between 80% and 90% of goods. And on Tuesday, Theresa May said that no-deal plans for the Irish border would be released on Wednesday.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, said the public would be hit by no-deal Brexit in the form of tariffs, non-tariff barriers and currency depreciation.

These would ”all push up costs and reduce the choice on the shelves we currently enjoy,“ she said. She added that businesses are ”exasperated by the lack of clarity over their future trading arrangements“.

”Hundreds of ships are currently sailing towards Britain without a clear understanding of the tariffs, checks, or documentation requirements, they will face when they arrive,“ she said.

Mike Hawes, chief executive of car industry body the SMMT, said the vote to reject Mrs May's deal ”leaves us perilously close to the 'cliff edge'.“ ”No-deal would be catastrophic for the automotive industry,“ he said.

”It would end frictionless trade, add billions to the cost of manufacturing and cost jobs.

“UK automotive businesses will be put at immediate risk. Parliament must reject no-deal and take it permanently off the table,” he added.

Categories: Economy, Politics, International.

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