
Bloomberg
This is the year when the biggest political and economic conundrum to face the UK in modern times will be solved, further complicated or even abandoned in all but name.
Within 10 months, the British government and European Union aim to have an agreement on their divorce and at least the outline of their future trading relationship. They have different ideas about what Brexit should look like and different views on how the talks themselves should be ordered.
Then there are the divisions within each camp. The UK’s governing Conservatives, whose decades-old rift over EU membership was the catalyst for Brexit, remain split over what it really means. The opposition Labour Party is avoiding the question, and the Scottish nationalists don’t want to leave at all.
The EU may be putting its unity before any other priority, but negotiations could reveal conflicting national interests among the remaining 27 members.
So after a year of flawed predictions, here’s a look at several scenarios that just might come to pass in 2018.
The Base Case
While the UK wants the full trade deal done by the time it leaves on March 29, 2019, the EU wants it ready to go by January 2021. This is what EU experts reckon could happen:
After a couple of months of uneventful talks, an agreement is reached on the transition deal that businesses have been crying out for. It’s not legally binding yet, but it’s enough to prevent a mass exodus of companies. In March, trade discussions start.
The UK fights for the City of London, but soon realises that all the banks have contingency plans anyway and a fair amount of business will still be done in London after the split. The EU won’t budge on its refusal to let the UK keep the best bits of membership and Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservatives won’t let her make the concessions that would be needed to remain in the EU’s single market.
In October there’s an outline agreement, which is vague, but detailed enough to be clear that Britain is headed for a trade deal that’s a lot like the one Canada struck with the EU.
It will keep tariffs off most goods, but put up barriers at customs and won’t do much for the service industries that make up most of the UK economy. Carsten Nickel of Teneo puts the chances of this scenario at about 60 percent. The Irish border is back as a major obstacle. May calls the bluff of her Northern Irish allies in the Democratic Unionist Party and they accept that in some areas they will have different rules to the rest of the UK to keep the border with the Republic of Ireland open.
Growing popular support for Labour under Jeremy Corbyn makes the DUP reluctant to walk out on May and let the leader they loathe come to power.
The dreaded cliff-edge scenario has been avoided, but companies start preparing for the trade barriers that lie ahead. No one knows when the detailed trade negotiations will finally end, so businesses are stuck with the outline for a while to come.
Talks on transition go well enough. Then, by October, it’s clear negotiations on the future trade partnership are failing. The question of how to keep the Irish border open without a customs agreement rears its head again.
By December, the time for talking is over as Brexit day looms. At an emergency negotiating session on Christmas Eve, the UK’s chief negotiator, Keir Starmer, accepts the EU’s offer of membership of the European Economic Area.
It means Britain will maintain full access to its biggest market for goods and services, but now has to accept rules it has no say in making. It has also failed to “take back control†of immigration, a major issue in the Brexit debate.
Talks on transition take longer than the UK hoped and the start of proper trade discussions is delayed. It soon becomes clear that the services industry is going to be largely left out of the future trade deal. Businesses squeal and Brexit-backers at home wonder in public why May agreed to pay a hefty divorce bill in return for such a bare-bones trade deal. Loose ends that weren’t properly tied up in the first few months of talks continue to dog discussions.
The EU again reminds the UK that it needs to find a way to keep the Irish border open after the split, but it won’t give an inch to help find a solution. The October deadline comes and goes and towards the end of the year talks break down with the UK team reluctantly walking out. Both sides are now hurtling toward a no-deal Brexit in March 2019 unless they can patch things up quickly.
Talks on trade and transition start quickly in January and by February a deal on transition is agreed.
The UK convinces the EU that it should offer it a “Canada plus, plus, plus†deal. That means a broad trade agreement that keeps tariffs off goods and also allows services companies, including banks, to continue to operate across the continent. The EU was divided on financial services but the pragmatists in Europe win the day.
Britain also convinces the EU that it needs to get a fully detailed trade agreement drafted in time for exit day so that it can be signed immediately after Brexit.
Businesses and customs officials now have a palatable two years to prepare for the shift to the new arrangement.
