THE UK and EU have failed to strike a deal over the British financial sector’s role in Europe, the Chancellor has said.
Rishi Sunak confirmed that the two sides have failed to sign an agreement for mutual recognition of financial services rules between London and the Continent since the Brexit transition period ended in January.
Ministers has previously hoped to sign a so-called “memorandum of understanding” by March this year, since no deal for the sector was signed ahead of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.
He told a room of young chief executives and entrepreneurs at Mansion House in London: “Our ambition had been to reach a comprehensive set of mutual decisions on financial services equivalence. That has not happened.”
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Sunak added that there is no reason why an agreement cannot be signed with the EU and said fears that regulatory standards could slip are wide of the mark.
“The EU will never have cause to deny the UK access because of poor regulatory standards,” he said.
“Take firms like clearing houses, which are fundamental to the open, free markets that we advocate …
“The UK already has one of the world’s most robust regulatory regimes for central counterparties.
“And our plan is not to weaken but strengthen that regime, because we believe in high-quality regulation.
“It is also entirely within international norms for like-minded jurisdictions to use each other’s market infrastructure.
“So I see no reason of substance why the UK cannot or should not continue to provide clearing services for countries in the EU and around the world.”
His comments came as he also laid out details about new deals with Singapore and Switzerland, alongside ongoing discussions with the US over financial markets.
“The US is already our biggest market, with the UK exporting 28 billion of financial services every year,” said Mr Sunak.
“Our ambition is to deepen regulatory co-operation even further, with our closest ally.”
During the speech, the Cabinet minister also said the UK will continue to improve its financial services to be competitive globally.
He said these will include increasing links with other global financial centres, being more competitive on regulation and tax, tapping into the growing tech sector and enhancing the UK’s position for green finance.
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On the final point, he confirmed the launch of a green savings bond for households to invest directly into the scheme which will fund new firms focused on reducing carbon emissions.
The Chancellor said there will also be new requirements for businesses and financial products to disclose sustainability information.
City of London Corporation police chairwoman Catherine McGuinness said after the event: “I think what was said about the EU sounded absolutely right to me, that we have a long shared history and shared values and we need to work with them.
“But we also need to accept the fact that if we’re not going to have equivalence decisions and we need to decide our own way forward with that as the backdrop.
“We need a strong relationship with them and we need to work with them.”
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