BREXIT: The Debate, the Decision, and the Aftermath
EXCERPTS
BREXIT DEBATE: AN UPHILL BATTLE
AFTERMATH OF BREXIT
On June 24, 2016, Britain voted to leave the EU. The ramifications of the poll result were felt not only across political and economic establishments around the world, but also in the global stock markets, which lost about US$2 trillion in value. Alongside the fall in the value of the pound, the euro witnessed a drastic fall against the dollar amidst fears of the outcome of Brexit on the Eurozone economy...
FAVORING BREXIT
Contrary to the claims of many commentators, the Brexiteers advocated that the impact on trade would be relatively small and felt only in the short period. They argued that Brexit would enable the UK to remain free of the cost of regulation and red tape imposed by Brussels and allow it to negotiate its own trade deals with the rest of the world and the EU...
ALTERNATIVE POST-BREXIT MODELS
Analysts believed that the post-Brexit trade landscape of the UK would depend on its future trade arrangement with the remaining 27 EU member countries. POLITICO opted for five possible models – the bloc’s arrangement with Norway, Switzerland, Turkey, Canada, and the World Trade Organization – that Brussels would offer in its future relationship with the UK following the British exit..
WAY FORWARD
The post-Brexit scenario assumed that the UK would have to follow the 2009 Lisbon Treaty and undergo a two-year period of negotiation on the terms and conditions of its future association with the EU before leaving the bloc...
EXHIBITS
Exhibit I: Britain’s Trade with EU Members
Exhibit: II: Treasury Analysis of the Immediate Impact of Brexit
Exhibit: III: Longer-term Effects of Brexit on Real GDP in the United Kingdom
Exhibit: IV: Single-Market Lite Arrangement