AFP, Manchester :
Worries are whirring in Britain’s smaller financial centres-which together employ far more people than the glamorous City of London-that the looming EU departure will lead to heavy job losses.
In Manchester’s buzzing finance district of Spinning fields, a worker at an insurance company said he thought it would have “a huge impact”.
“Business are going to pull out, there will be a lot of job losses,” Mohammed, who declined to give his surname because of the sensitivity of the issue, told AFP.
Financial and professional services, which rely heavily on access to Europe’s single market, employ 2.2 million people, or seven percent of Britain’s working population, according to The City UK, a lobbying group.
Two-thirds of those workers, or 1.5 million, are based outside London.
The northwestern English city of Manchester, for example, is one of Britain’s biggest finance hubs.
Fraser Morris, client director at Brown Shipley, a private bank in the city, said the loss of banking “passports” which allow firms to operate freely across the single market could spell trouble.
“If we lose the passporting, it might have a big effect because finance services are such a big area for the whole country,” he said.
“We are obviously a little bit nervous about the outcome,” he said, adding that he believed negotiations would “last a few years”.
Prime Minister Theresa May is set to kick start the process on Wednesday with a formal notification to the EU of Britain’s intention to leave after last year’s historic Brexit referendum.
“It’s difficult to get a full handle, purely because we do not know the outcome of the negotiations,” said Keith Pilbeam, a professor at the Department of Economics at City, University of London.
“If they go well-which is a big if-there should not be too many job losses,” he said.
But if things go badly, he warned that up to 240,000 jobs could be cut, or around 10 percent of the financial sector workforce.
Worries are whirring in Britain’s smaller financial centres-which together employ far more people than the glamorous City of London-that the looming EU departure will lead to heavy job losses.
In Manchester’s buzzing finance district of Spinning fields, a worker at an insurance company said he thought it would have “a huge impact”.
“Business are going to pull out, there will be a lot of job losses,” Mohammed, who declined to give his surname because of the sensitivity of the issue, told AFP.
Financial and professional services, which rely heavily on access to Europe’s single market, employ 2.2 million people, or seven percent of Britain’s working population, according to The City UK, a lobbying group.
Two-thirds of those workers, or 1.5 million, are based outside London.
The northwestern English city of Manchester, for example, is one of Britain’s biggest finance hubs.
Fraser Morris, client director at Brown Shipley, a private bank in the city, said the loss of banking “passports” which allow firms to operate freely across the single market could spell trouble.
“If we lose the passporting, it might have a big effect because finance services are such a big area for the whole country,” he said.
“We are obviously a little bit nervous about the outcome,” he said, adding that he believed negotiations would “last a few years”.
Prime Minister Theresa May is set to kick start the process on Wednesday with a formal notification to the EU of Britain’s intention to leave after last year’s historic Brexit referendum.
“It’s difficult to get a full handle, purely because we do not know the outcome of the negotiations,” said Keith Pilbeam, a professor at the Department of Economics at City, University of London.
“If they go well-which is a big if-there should not be too many job losses,” he said.
But if things go badly, he warned that up to 240,000 jobs could be cut, or around 10 percent of the financial sector workforce.