Xinhua, Berlin :
The Federation of German Industries (BDI) spoke out on Wednesday against renegotiating the agreement between the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK).
“The UK Prime Minister’s demand that the withdrawal agreement be reopened is irresponsible,” said BDI Director General Joachim Lang.
The withdrawal agreement held “enormous importance for the German economy,” Lang stressed.
German companies relied on “as little friction as possible in foreign trade, stable conditions at the external borders and security in matters relating to workers,” added Lang.
Lang emphasized that German industry supported the the government and European Commission in standing by the negotiated treaty, and urged Brussels and London to “set the right course in order to avert the threat of hard Brexit.”
Brexit has already been leaving its mark on UK-German trade for a while, according to Berthold Busch, senior economist for European Integration at the German Economic Institute.
The Institute found that while German exports of goods to the EU rose by more than 12 percent between 2015 and 2018, its exports to the UK fell by 7.8 percent.
The decline was particularly pronounced for motor vehicles and pharmaceutical products, which “suggests that the value chains in these particularly closely interwoven branches of industry are already being restructured at the expense of the United Kingdom,” Busch said.
The new UK government was conducting “irresponsible politics” by ignoring such negative developments and instead, UK policy continued to pursue its strategy of “whatever the cost,” said Busch.
Lang noted that during this “sensitive phase, the existing concerns in the economy should be exacerbated. Our companies now have no choice but to continue to prepare for a hard Brexit on 31 October.”
The Federation of German Industries (BDI) spoke out on Wednesday against renegotiating the agreement between the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK).
“The UK Prime Minister’s demand that the withdrawal agreement be reopened is irresponsible,” said BDI Director General Joachim Lang.
The withdrawal agreement held “enormous importance for the German economy,” Lang stressed.
German companies relied on “as little friction as possible in foreign trade, stable conditions at the external borders and security in matters relating to workers,” added Lang.
Lang emphasized that German industry supported the the government and European Commission in standing by the negotiated treaty, and urged Brussels and London to “set the right course in order to avert the threat of hard Brexit.”
Brexit has already been leaving its mark on UK-German trade for a while, according to Berthold Busch, senior economist for European Integration at the German Economic Institute.
The Institute found that while German exports of goods to the EU rose by more than 12 percent between 2015 and 2018, its exports to the UK fell by 7.8 percent.
The decline was particularly pronounced for motor vehicles and pharmaceutical products, which “suggests that the value chains in these particularly closely interwoven branches of industry are already being restructured at the expense of the United Kingdom,” Busch said.
The new UK government was conducting “irresponsible politics” by ignoring such negative developments and instead, UK policy continued to pursue its strategy of “whatever the cost,” said Busch.
Lang noted that during this “sensitive phase, the existing concerns in the economy should be exacerbated. Our companies now have no choice but to continue to prepare for a hard Brexit on 31 October.”