west didsblue
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Oct 2011
- Messages
- 33,965
Interesting.I work in an investment Bank and have been working on the plans to restructure the business around brexit. It us true that most of the work is done or the switch ready to be flicked, not all but most. What is yet to filter through though is the tax implications. The Banks have had to transform branches in to standalone legal entities and that means they pay tax and get regulated where previously they operated as a branch under the Eu passporting regime. The big driver is the regulation, you only want to be regulated once and the passport regime does that at its core. Once we fall outside the BoE as regulator is not recongnised in the EU and you would duplicate the regulation on a UK Bank operating in the EU. So those 'branches" are are ready to convert in very short notice.
The implication of this are:-
A, More banking activity moving to the EU
B, Tax payable in the EU - not the UK
C, Less relevance of BoE and more for EU law (these will diverge over time)
D, More jobs moving to the EU as a result of C (firms will be EU firms subject to EU regulation and face to face regulator meetings will be in major EU cities, accounts filed locally, employment law locally etc etc).
Backs up the point that the large FS companies will not unduly suffer from Brexit, but the UK certainly will due to less tax being received and because of the migration of high paying jobs abroad, with the consequent lower demand for the lower paid jobs that are there to support the big companies in the UK and also are there as a result of the high earners spending their money in this country.
So a lower tax take and fewer jobs but the very rich will not suffer unduly. That's ok then, no problem for BoJo and his mates!