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How a possible ‘Brexit’ could change the game on the Canada-EU trade pact

The United Kingdom's Prime Minister David Cameron does not support Brexit but agreed to put it to a ballot after years of debate.

OTTAWA – Last week, International Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland declared mission accomplished in Canada’s efforts to close an all-encompassing cope with its European partners. 

But it’s now increasingly entirely possible that Britain, our biggest customer in the biggest trading region of the world, might soon not be part of that agreement. 

There’s every chance that citizens of the United Kingdom could, in a few months, vote to leave europe and go it alone – forcing the nation to search out separate agreements with its current trading-group partners.

One of these is Canada, which would need to negotiate a new pact with the U.K. outside of the Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement – or CETA – that was signed off on by the EU and Canada on Feb. 29, and hang in the future into effect as soon as mid-2017.

So far, Freeland hasn’t spoken publicly on the U.K. referendum issue, nor will Canadian ministry officials discuss its likely effect on trade relations, at least not ahead of the British vote. 

It’s unlikely, however, that Canada would be the main concern for new negotiations in the event that an english exit – nicknamed “Brexit” – from the current 28-nation union is approved on June 23 in the national vote.

For something, the U.K. government – led by Prime Minister David Cameron, who does not support Brexit but agreed to place it to some ballot after many years of debate – would need to cope with the immediate economic uncertainty that unquestionably will follow a cut in formal ties with the EU.

“It is going to be negative for the economy, no doubt,” says Charles St-Arnaud, an economist at Nomura Global Research in London, adding that there will be a huge knock-on effect for the country’s powerful financial sector.

In particular, “how much cash would need to be gone to live in (other) EU countries? The French and the Germans would be more than happy to see Frankfurt and Paris get the business – and have those cities as the financial capital of Europe.”

At the same time frame, the U.K. in some form “will be attempting to arrange quickly a free-trade agreement with the remainder of Europe and the Usa – before Canada,” St-Arnaud says.

“They goes with the big trading partners first.”

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