EU accepts Brexit extension - 2 minutes read
Live: Brexit extension announced as Boris Johnson pushes for December election
Businesses in the United Kingdom have already endured more than three years of Brexit uncertainty.
Now, as the third deadline to leave the European Union zooms by, companies are left to grapple with a profoundly unpredictable domestic political situation that will further erode business investment.
Companies had been cautiously optimistic that Prime Minister Boris Johnson would remove the immediate threat of a disorderly break with the European Union by pushing his Brexit deal through UK Parliament ahead of the latest October 31 exit deadline.
He failed to secure approval, instead seeking another extension from Brussels while demanding a UK general election on December 12.
A completed deal on Brexit, even one that harmed the economy by erecting new trade barriers between Britain and its largest export market, would have provided businesses with some of the policy certainty they have been craving.
That, in turn, might have encouraged CEOs to start spending more money on equipment, factory upgrades and expansions that have been delayed because of uncertainty over Brexit.
Read more about Brexit's impact on business here.
Source: CNN
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Keywords:
Brexit • Boris Johnson • United Kingdom general election, December 1910 • United Kingdom • Brexit • European Union • Prime Minister of the United Kingdom • Boris Johnson • European Union • Brexit • Parliament of the United Kingdom • Brussels • United Kingdom general election, 2010 • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • Economy • Trade barrier • British Empire • International trade • Market (economics) • Business • Policy • Money • Factory • Uncertainty • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • Social influence • Business •
Businesses in the United Kingdom have already endured more than three years of Brexit uncertainty.
Now, as the third deadline to leave the European Union zooms by, companies are left to grapple with a profoundly unpredictable domestic political situation that will further erode business investment.
Companies had been cautiously optimistic that Prime Minister Boris Johnson would remove the immediate threat of a disorderly break with the European Union by pushing his Brexit deal through UK Parliament ahead of the latest October 31 exit deadline.
He failed to secure approval, instead seeking another extension from Brussels while demanding a UK general election on December 12.
A completed deal on Brexit, even one that harmed the economy by erecting new trade barriers between Britain and its largest export market, would have provided businesses with some of the policy certainty they have been craving.
That, in turn, might have encouraged CEOs to start spending more money on equipment, factory upgrades and expansions that have been delayed because of uncertainty over Brexit.
Read more about Brexit's impact on business here.
Source: CNN
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Brexit • Boris Johnson • United Kingdom general election, December 1910 • United Kingdom • Brexit • European Union • Prime Minister of the United Kingdom • Boris Johnson • European Union • Brexit • Parliament of the United Kingdom • Brussels • United Kingdom general election, 2010 • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • Economy • Trade barrier • British Empire • International trade • Market (economics) • Business • Policy • Money • Factory • Uncertainty • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 • Social influence • Business •