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UK must rebuild post-Brexit relations with EU, says Bank boss

2024-11-15 03:00:06

The UK must "rebuild relations" with the EU "while respecting the decision of the British people" who voted to leave in 2016, the Bank of England's governor has said.

Andrew Bailey's Mansion House speech to investors marked some of his strongest comments yet on Brexit, saying one of its consequences has been weaker trade.

He has previously avoided commenting on the topic because of the Bank's independence from Westminster politics.

Mr Bailey said the changed relationship with the EU has "weighed" on the economy.

"As a public official, I take no position on Brexit per se," he said. "But I do have to point out consequences."

He went on: "The impact on trade seems to be more in goods than services... But it underlines why we must be alert to and welcome opportunities to rebuild relations while respecting that very important decision of the British people."

The government remains opposed to rejoining the EU, but Chancellor Rachel Reeves also said in her Mansion House speech there could be a closer relationship.

"Our biggest trading partner is the European Union. We will not be reversing Brexit, or re-entering the single market or customs union. But we must reset our relationship," she said.

Mr Bailey said that the UK should not focus "just on the effects of Brexit", warning about "geopolitical shocks and the broader fragmentation of the global economy".

He made a similar comment last week when asked about US President-elect Donald Trump and his threat to impose tariffs of up to 20% on imports.

Vicky Pryce, chief economic adviser to the Centre for Economics and Business Research, said if that were to happen, "it is actually quite questionable whether the UK could have a special relationship with the US when it still trades quite substantially with Europe".

Reeves also reiterated her plans to shake up the UK pension system in a bid for growth.

She wants council pension pots to be merged so they can make bigger investments to generate higher returns, a move criticised as risky by some.

“The UK has been regulating for risk, but not regulating for growth,” she said.

The annual event took place against a backdrop of businesses criticising the government for holding back growth through tax rises, which Reeves has said are necessary to "properly fund" public services.

In her speech, Reeves said that regulations brought in after the 2008 global financial crisis "resulted in a system which sought to eliminate risk-taking", adding that has now "gone too far".

She said financial services in the UK were "the crown jewel in our economy" but added "we cannot take the UK's status as a global financial centre for granted".

The government will publish a financial services strategy in the spring, focusing on fintech, sustainable finance, asset management, insurance and capital markets, "laying the foundations for more private investment", Reeves said.

Mr Bailey's speech went on to address the wider UK economy and its lack of growth.

He described how productivity has fallen since the 2008 economic crash and has not recovered since.

He said the UK is not alone in having this problem, which he said also affects other parts of Europe, but noted that the US has "a better story to tell".

Mr Bailey also echoed Reeves' concern that the UK pension system is "fragmented" and requires "heavy lifting" to fix it.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said the Conservatives would "study the detail of these reforms, many of which follow on from those we were pursuing in government".

But he added that reforms "aimed at increasing growth will be significantly undermined by Labour's Budget, which sent precisely the wrong signal to investors and wealth creators".