So what started as a gamble by David Cameron on an outlet for domestic British discontent, to be used as a lever to bargain with Brussels for a few more favors, has metastasized into an astonishing political earthquake about the dis-integration of the European Union.
The irrepressibly mediocre Donald Tusk, president ofĀ the European Council, posing asĀ a āhistorianā, had warned that Brexit, ācould be the beginning ofĀ the destruction ofĀ not only the EU butĀ Western political civilization inĀ its entiretyā.
Thatās foolish. Brexit proved that itās immigration, stupid. And once again, itās the economy, stupid (although the British neoliberal establishment never paid attention). But serious bets can be made the EU system inĀ Brussels wonāt learn anything fromĀ the shock therapy ā and wonāt reform itself. There will be rationalizations that afterĀ all the UK was always classically whiny, obtrusive and demanding special privileges when dealing withĀ the EU. As for āWestern political civilizationā, what will end ā and this is a big thingĀ ā is the special transatlantic relationship betweenĀ the US and the EU withĀ Britain asĀ an American Trojan Horse.
Scotland, predictably, voted Remain, and may probably hold a new referendumĀ ā and leave the UKĀ ā rather thanĀ be dragged outĀ by white working class English votes. Sinn Fein already wants a vote onĀ united Ireland. Denmark, the Netherlands and even Poland and Hungary will want special status insideĀ the EU, or else. Across Europe, the extreme right stampede is on. Marine Le Pen wants a French referendum. Geert Wilders wants a Dutch referendum. As forĀ the vast majority ofĀ British under-25s who voted Remain, they may be contemplating one-way tickets not toĀ the continent, butĀ beyond.
Show me the people
Anglo-French historian Robert Tombs has remarked that when Europeans talk aboutĀ history they refer toĀ the Roman Empire, the Renaissance and the Enlightenment. Great Britain is somewhat overlooked. In reciprocity, quite a few Britons still consider Europe an entity that should be kept atĀ a safe distance.
To compound the problem, this is not a āEurope ofĀ peoplesā. Brussels absolutely detests European public opinion, and the system exhibits an iron resistance toĀ reform. This current EU project that ultimately aims atĀ a federation, modeled onĀ the US, does not cut it inĀ most ofĀ Britain. Arguably this is one ofĀ the key reasons behindĀ Brexit ā which forĀ its part has already disunited the kingdom and may eventually downgrade it intoĀ a tiny trading post onĀ the edge ofĀ Europe.
Brexit though does not mean Britain will be free fromĀ the dictates ofĀ the European Commission (EC). The EC does propose policy, butĀ nothing can be followed throughĀ without decisions fromĀ the European Parliament and the Council ofĀ Ministers, which group representatives ofĀ all elected governments ofĀ member states.
Arguably Remain, inĀ the best possible case, would have led toĀ some soul-searching inĀ Brussels, and a wake-up call, translating intoĀ a more flexible monetary policy; a push toĀ contain immigration insideĀ African borders; and more opening towardsĀ Russia. The UK would remain inĀ Europe giving more weight toĀ countries outsideĀ the eurozone while Germany would concentrate onĀ the 19-member eurozone nations.
So Remain would have led toĀ the UK increasing its politico-economic weight inĀ Brussels while Germany would be more open toĀ moderate growth (instead ofĀ austerity). Although Britain arguably would wince atĀ the notion ofĀ a future eurozone Treasure Minister, a European FBI and a European Minister ofĀ the Interior, inĀ fact the whole notion ofĀ a complete economic and monetary union.
The UK not only will lose duty-free access toĀ the EUās single market ofĀ 500 million people; it will have toĀ renegotiate every single trade deal withĀ the rest ofĀ the world sinceĀ all ofĀ them have been EU-negotiated. French economy minister and presidential hopeful Emmanuel Macron has already warned that, āif the UK wants a commercial access treaty toĀ the European market, the British must contribute toĀ the European budget likeĀ the Norwegians and the Swiss do. If London doesnāt want that, then it must be a total exit.ā Britain will be locked outĀ of the single market ā toĀ which overĀ 50% ofĀ its exports goĀ ā unless it pays almost all that it currently pays. Moreover, London must still accept freedom ofĀ movement, asĀ in European immigration.
The City gets a black eye
Brexit defeated an overwhelming array ofĀ what Zygmunt Bauman defined asĀ the global elites ofĀ liquid modernity; the City ofĀ London, Wall Street, the IMF, the Fed, the European Central Bank (ECB), major hedge/investment funds, the whole interconnected global banking system.
The City ofĀ London, predictably, voted Remain byĀ over 75%.Ā An overwhelming $2.7 trillion is traded every day inĀ the āsquare mileā, which employs almost 400,000 people. And itās not only the square mile, asĀ the City now also includes Canary Wharf (HQ ofĀ quite a few big banks) and Mayfair (privileged hang outĀ of hedge funds).
The City ofĀ London ā the undisputed financial capital ofĀ EuropeĀ ā also manages a whopping $1.65 trillion ofĀ client assets, wealth literally fromĀ all overĀ the planet. In Treasure Islands, Nicholas Shaxson argues, āfinancial services companies have flocked toĀ London because it lets them do what they cannot do atĀ homeā.
Unbridled deregulation coupled withĀ unrivalled influence onĀ the global economic system amount toĀ a toxic mix. So Brexit may also be interpreted asĀ a vote againstĀ corruption permeating Englandās most lucrative industry.
Things will change. Drastically. There will be no more āpassportingā, byĀ which banks can sell products forĀ all 28 EU members, accessing a $19 trillion integrated economy. All it takes is a HQ inĀ London and a few satellite mini-offices. Passporting will be upĀ for fierce negotiation, asĀ well asĀ what happens toĀ Londonās euro-denominated trading floors.
He Weiwen, co-director ofĀ the China-US-EU Study Centre underĀ the China Association ofĀ International Trade, part ofĀ the Ministry ofĀ Commerce, is blunt; āThe European Union is likely toĀ adopt a more protectionist approach when dealing withĀ China. For Chinese companies which have set upĀ headquarters or branches inĀ the UK, they may not be able toĀ enjoy tariff-free access toĀ the wider European market afterĀ Britain leave the EU.ā
That applies, forĀ instance, toĀ leading Chinese high-tech companies likeĀ Huawei and Tencent. Between 2000 and 2015, Britain was the top European destination forĀ Chinese direct investment, and was the second-largest trading partner withĀ China insideĀ the EU.
Still, it may all revert intoĀ a win-win forĀ China. Germany, France and Luxembourg ā all ofĀ them competing withĀ London forĀ the juicy offshore yuan business ā will increase their role. Chen Long, economist withĀ Bank ofĀ Dongguan, is confident āthe European continent, especially Central and Eastern European countries, will be more actively involved inĀ Chinaās āOne Belt, One Roadā programs.ā
So will Britain become the new Norway? Itās possible. Norway did very well afterĀ rejecting EU membership inĀ a 1995 referendum. It will be a long and winding road beforeĀ Article 50 is invoked and a two-year UK-EU negotiation inĀ uncharted territory starts. Former UK Chancellor ofĀ the Exchequer Alistair Darling summed it all up; āNobody has a clue what āOutā looks like.ā
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate