Views split on
impact of Brexit on China, while concerns mount in London over future of its
role as a global finance hub and gateway to Europe. Finance Minister Lou Jiwei
sees Britain’s vote to leave the European Union as heightening uncertainty and
impacting markets and the global economy for years to come.
The comments yesterday came as
London began to weigh the implications for its reputation as the gateway for
US and Asian businesses into Europe’s vast single market.
“[The result] will cast a
shadow over the global economy ... The repercussions and fallout will emerge
in the next five to 10 years,” Lou said at the first annual meeting of the
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank in Beijing.
“It’s difficult to predict
now. The knee-jerk reaction from the market is probably a bit excessive, it
needs to calm down and take an objective view.”
Lou’s views were echoed by
other economists at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in the northern city of
Tianjin.
“It’s hard to talk about and
judge the direct impact on China’s economy,” said Huang Yiping, a professor at
Peking University and a member of the central bank’s monetary policy committee.
“If [Brexit] is an important landmark in terms of a reversal of globalisation,
I think that’s very bad for the world, it’s very bad for China.”
But Li Daokui, a professor at
Tsinghua University and a former adviser to China’s central bank, was more
optimistic.
“China is perhaps one of the
least impacted economies in the world by Brexit,” he told an audience at the
WEF. “The only short-term impact I can think of is on the exchange rate of the
renminbi.”
Meanwhile, in London, there
are growing fears that investors and bankers could flee the city after the
shock vote, threatening its coveted reputation as a global financial hub.
Some 60 per cent of Londoners
voted to stay in the EU in Thursday’s historic referendum, but most of the rest
of England cast their ballots overwhelmingly to leave. The capital’s 8.6
million residents, whose GDP is about the same as that of oil-rich Norway, are
anxious about the impact on the city’s economy.
According to ratings agency
Standard and Poor’s, a fifth of all global banking activity takes place in
London.
A haemorrhaging of bankers
could hit the city, where the financial sector provides one in three jobs – or
about 1.25 million.
British business minister
Sajid Javid yesterday urged companies not to panic.
“Our economic fundamentals
remain strong. They’re strong enough to weather any short-term market volatility,”
he said in an interview with the BBC.
The minister plans to hold a
roundtable meeting with business associations this week, with British media
reporting that it could be as early as tomorrow.
Javid campaigned for Britain
to remain in the EU and warned during the campaign that a vote to leave could
trigger a recession and 500,000 job cuts.
On Sunday, he refused to
confirm the dire forecasts, saying it was time for “reassurance for
businesses”.
“If we all work together we
can avoid many of the things we have forecast,” he said. “Let’s look at what
opportunities this throws up.”
Scotland’s First Minister
Nicola Sturgeon also added to the woes of the Brexit leaders by suggesting the
Scottish Parliament could keep Britain from leaving the European Union. She
told the BBC yesterday she believed the consent of the Scottish Parliament
would be needed for Britain to leave but conceded that the British government
would probably take a “very different view”.
European lawmakers have urged
Britain to begin EU exit proceedings at a European Council meeting starting
tomorrow.
Martin Schulz told German
newspaper Bild am Sonntag that a period of limbo would “lead to even more
insecurity and thus endanger jobs”.
However, German Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s chief of staff insisted there was no rush to show Britain the
door.
“The political leadership in
London should have the chance to reconsider once again the consequences of a
withdrawal,” Peter Altmaier told RND media group.
Altmaier later clarified that
he was “explicitly” not suggesting another referendum.
British Foreign Minister
Philip Hammond, who had campaigned for Britain to stay, said there would have
to be a trade-off with the EU on the free movement of people if Britain wanted
to remain in the single market.
Meanwhile, a petition on
Parliament’s website for London to be independent from Britain and apply to
join the EU – dubbed “Lexit” – has been gaining popularity since it started as
a joke on Saturday.
Another petition on the
website calling for a second EU referendum has rapidly gathered more than three
million signatures.
Ironically, the petition was
started in May by a “Leave” campaign supporter as a back-up plan in case the
“Remain” camp won.
SCMP
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