Europe > Western Europe > Germany > Germany warns UK on single market access

Germany: Germany warns UK on single market access

2016/06/11

If British people vote to leave the EU, the UK would be kept out of the single market and the EU would not integrate further, German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has said.

"In is in. Out is out," the influential minister said in an interview with the Spiegel , a German weekly. "Europe would as well work without Britain if necessary," he added.

He said that if Britain left the EU, it would not have free access to the single market.

“That [market access] would require the country to abide by the rules of a club from which it currently wants to withdraw," he said.

Schaeuble said a Brexit would have a profound impact on the EU.

He said it would be "a wake-up call and a warning not to continue with business as usual".

He warned that other member states, particularly the Netherlands, may face copycat calls for votes to leave the EU.

In April, Dutch voters by presently voiced anti-EU feeling by rejecting an EU-Ukraine trade agreement in a referendum.

Schaeuble, who is considered to be one of the majority pro-European politicians in Germany, said a Brexit would put the brakes on further integration.

"In response to Brexit, we couldn't simply call for additional integration," he said. "That would be crude, a lot of would rightfully wonder whether we politicians still hadn't understood [average people].”

With just two weeks to go to the UK vote on 23 June, Schaeuble said EU finance chiefs would “contain” the financial and economic consequences of either scenario.

He said that “[my] counterparts in the eurozone and I will do everything possible to contain these consequences".

"We are preparing for all possible scenarios to limit the risks," he said.

Related Articles
  • Aluminium-Lithium Alloys Fight Back

    2017/09/16 At the same time as it comes to the aviation industry, new technologies and manufacturing techniques have been mounting a silent revolution in the new generation of commercial twin-aisle aircraft: the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and Airbus A350. Both these aircraft contain around 50% of CFRP composites, as opposed to their previous iterations where aluminium alloys had dominated. This explains why, at the same time as Boeing and Airbus introduced these two crafts several years ago, most experts thought that the next generation of planes would be made out of composites, a trend that would again expand to include smaller jets – but as turns out, they were wrong.
  • Zhongwang Acquires German Alumnium Extrusion Firm ALUnna

    2017/09/16 The world’s second major aluminium extrusion firm China Zhongwang Holdings Ltd announced yesterday that it presently holds a controlling interest in German aluminium extrusion firm Aluminiumwerk Unna AG (ALUnna). Although no price for the purchase was given, the transaction gives all owned German subsidiary Zhongwang Aluminium Deutschland GmbH a 99.72-% equity interest in ALUnna. According to experts, the purchase enhances Zhongwang’s position in the world aviation market inclunding giving the firm a stronger foothold on the European continent.
  • UNWTO: International tourism – strongest half-year results since 2010

    2017/09/09 Destinations worldwide welcomed 598 million international tourists in the initial six months of 2017, some 36 million additional than in the same period of 2016. At 6%, increase was well above the trend of recent years, making the current January-June period the strongest half-year since 2010. Visitor numbers reported by destinations around the world reflect strong request for international travel in the initial half of 2017, according to the new UNWTO World Tourism Barometer. Worldwide, international tourist arrivals (overnight visitors) increased by 6% compared to the same six-month period last year, well above the sustained and consistent trend of 4% or higher increase since 2010. This represents the strongest half-year in seven years.
  • US LNG exports make European market more competitive

    2017/08/27 The European gas market is becoming additional and additional competitive and US exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) are part of this landscape, Francis Perrin, energy expert, chairman of Energy Strategies and Policies (France) told Trend. “Energy is always a strategic business. Economic aspects are very significant of course, particularly the price of LNG, but nations as well take into account strategic issues. For some Central and Eastern European nations one of the key priorities of their energy policies is the diversification of their supplies, in particular gas imports, in order to reduce their dependence on Russia,” said the expert.
  • German Producer Price Inflation Slowest In 7 Months

    2017/08/22 German producer prices rose at the slowest pace so far this year in July, data from Destatis showed Friday. Producer prices for industrial products advanced 2.3 % year-on-year in July, slightly weaker than the 2.4 % increase seen in June. This was the weakest since December, at the same time as prices gained 1 %. Economists had estimate 2.2 % annual increase.