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full speed ahead

Iconic British brand Jaguar-Land Rover warns about Brexit impact - but Theresa May has a plan

Brexit Secretary David Davis reportedly told May the proposal was “unworkable”.

ICONIC INDIAN-OWNED British carmaker Jaguar Land Rover today became the latest company to warn that new trade barriers with Europe could imperil thousands of jobs and billions in investment, as the government headed into a high-stakes meeting to decide the fate of Brexit.

A day before Prime Minister Theresa May convenes her warring cabinet to thrash out a common approach, aides said she had drawn up a compromise customs plan to ease trade with the European Union after Brexit takes effect in March 2019.

But the plan immediately ran into trouble, with Brexit Secretary David Davis reportedly telling May the proposal was “unworkable” and would not be accepted by Brussels.

With the government at loggerheads and the EU looking on anxiously, Airbus, BMW and Siemens have also warned in recent weeks that they could yank investment out of Britain unless any Brexit deal ensures cross-Channel trade continues to flow freely.

The chief executive of Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), which is owned by India’s Tata Motors, said its “heart and soul was in the UK”.

“However, we, and our partners in the supply chain, face an unpredictable future if the Brexit negotiations do not maintain free and frictionless trade with the EU and unrestricted access to the single market,” Ralf Speth said in a statement.

We urgently need greater certainty to continue to invest heavily in the UK and safeguard our suppliers, customers and 40,000 British-based employees.

Brexit Dave Thompson Dave Thompson

Ever since Britain voted in a June 2016 referendum to quit the EU, the government has been grappling with the intractable problem of what kind of Brexit to deliver.

May had vowed a clean break by quitting the EU’s customs union and single market, which have bound Britain to rules set in Brussels.

While such a drastic break would free Britain to build its own trading regime, it risks severe disruption to business and is opposed by many lawmakers in May’s Conservative Party.

Details of May’s new so-called “facilitated customs arrangement” were still lacking, but it takes elements from two existing customs plans — both of which have been rejected by Brussels.

And while opposition lawmakers seized on the Jaguar warning to underline the risks of uncertainty for British jobs, Business Secretary Greg Clark said the government was determined to ensure JLR can continue to invest.

For its part, the British Retail Consortium noted that fully half of Britain’s food is imported, mostly from the EU, and those supplies rely on intricate and fragile trading links.

Failure to reach a Brexit deal would have dramatic consequences for UK consumers as well as EU producers, it wrote in a letter to May and chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier.

“It is likely that we will see food rotting at ports, reducing the choice and quality of what is available to consumers,” the BRC said, calling for no new barriers and flexibility from the EU during a transition period.

© – AFP, 2018

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