#30 UK es el USA de estas Tierras, jamas le va a ir mal como le va a España, UK es un pais de migrantes y las Empresas prefieren invertir alli antes que aqui, eso de que les pueda ir mal te lo sacas de la manga no te lo crees ni tu.
Salen ganando en la gestión de sus aguas para la pesca, un mercado que supone el 0.1% del PIB. En el resto sale ganando la UE.
Boris necesitaba ganar esa negociación ya que no podía permitirse perder el apoyo del gremio de pescadores, a saber que ha ofrecido a cambio.
#32 ha cedido todo
Mañana la UE puede crear una nueva normativa para los vehículos fabricados o vendidos en la UE y Uk tendrá que aplicarla sin voz ni voto por estar en el mercado común.
Éxito enorme de Uk xd
#34 Pero eso ya estaba pactado de hace tiempo, el ultimo escollo que quedaba era el tratado de aguas marítimas para uso pesquero. Tanto Francia como UK se lo tomaban como algo personal ya que solo supone el 0,1 del PIB. Al final ha salido ganado UK, imagino que les abran ofrecido algo a los franceses que les compense la bajada de pantalones.
#35 estaba pactado pero hasta el último momento han amenazado con romperlo y que no hubiera acuerdo
Al final han sacado ventaja en la pesca y ya está. Éxito total del brexit
Respiran aliviados miles de familias en el Campo de Gibraltar. El resto seguid con la pamplina patriota.
me encanta ver rabiar a mas de uno por un pais de migrantes como UK al cual le va bien en la mayoria de aspectos, ya es odiar por odiar ahahahaha
quizas se deberia de mirar que se hace mal aqui en lugar de odiar al de fuera.
Europa está destinada al fracaso... nos invadirán o nos joderán economicamente... pero nos van a pisar xD
Que me digan en qué ganan.
No siguen en el mercado único, simplemente hay un tratado para evitar aranceles como con japón, korea o canadá.
1. Trade in goods
The EU and UK’s starting point for the future relationship talks was that they should lead to a deal with no tariffs on trade in goods between the two sides. They also wanted no quantitative restrictions on the volume of goods that could be sold free of tariffs.
That was negotiated, meaning the deal will go beyond what the EU has done with any other advanced economy outside the European single market.
But the agreement is still a very different state of affairs to membership of the EU single market and customs union.
Once implemented, from January 1, a hard customs and regulatory border will exist between the EU and UK, and goods will face checks and controls that can be smoothed at the margins only by co-operation.
The deal will include facilitations such as co-operation on trusted trader schemes, but none of these erase border checks.
“The agreement provides for continued and sustainable air, road, rail and maritime connectivity, though market access falls below what the single market offers,” said the European Commission.
2. Fair business competition
The EU’s offer on tariff-free trade was contingent on the UK agreeing to uphold a “level playing field” on fair business competition in areas such as environmental standards.
Brussels was also keen to ensure the UK does not have unfettered scope to disburse state aid to prized industries, giving them a competitive advantage.
The agreement includes common binding principles on state aid, enforceable in both sides’ courts, which would be able to recover illegal subsidies.
It also includes a painstakingly negotiated “rebalancing mechanism” to deal with a situation where the sides’ regulations in areas such as labour rights diverge over time.
The mechanism, which would be subject to independent arbitration, would allow the disadvantaged side to impose tariffs to restore fair competition.
But, crucially for the UK, it will not be required to follow EU rules directly or be subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.
Being outside the European single market has other regulatory consequences for Britain. For example, UK businesses will no longer be able to assume that product authorisations from British watchdogs will allow their goods to be placed on the European market.
3. Fish
The deal creates a five-and-a-half-year transition period during which EU fishermen will have guaranteed access to UK waters.
EU quotas in British waters will decline in the transition by 25 per cent compared with current levels, and this will have the knock-on effect of boosting how much UK fishermen can secure. EU boats currently catch about €650m of fish in British waters each year.
Once the transition period is over, EU boats’ access to UK waters will in principle depend on annual negotiations between both sides. Those talks will also determine the overall quantities of different species that can be caught.
Should EU boats’ access to British waters ever be revoked by the UK, the bloc will have the right to take compensatory measures. These include retaliatory closing of EU waters to UK boats, and the imposition of tariffs on British fish.
The deal also links the UK’s access to the EU energy market to access to British fishing waters.
The UK warded off EU demands for a cross-retaliation power to hit other parts of the British economy should a dispute over fish escalate.
Still, the deal does provide a last-resort “safeguard” option that would allow either side to take emergency measures to protect coastal communities, subject to dispute-settlement arrangements in the agreement.
The deal enshrines the principle that Britain is now outside the EU’s common fisheries policy: an independent coastal state with sovereignty over its waters.
4. Financial services
The City of London will exit the EU’s single market for financial services at the end of the Brexit transition period on December 31.
Both sides have said that the new market access arrangements for UK and EU financial services companies should be based on unilateral decisions by Britain and the bloc, rather than be provided for in the trade agreement.
These so-called equivalence decisions involve each side evaluating whether the other’s financial services regulations are as tough as its own.
Banks and traders have acknowledged that the proposed system is more piecemeal than existing arrangements, and less stable. The EU did not announce any fresh equivalence decisions on UK access to the bloc’s markets alongside the trade agreement on Thursday, resulting in uncertainty in key areas including share trading and derivatives.
The two sides plan to put in place a regulatory dialogue on financial services based on a separate memorandum of understanding.
5. Migration
Current British and EU expatriates have their rights safeguarded by the UK’s 2019 withdrawal agreement with the bloc, but big changes to migration arrangements take effect from January 1.
Britons will no longer have the benefit of European freedom of movement: the right to go to any EU member state and seek to work and live there on the same basis as the country’s own citizens.
Instead, Britons will rely on a visa-waiver programme to travel to the EU for short stays, and on member states’ national rules for the right to work.
Ending free movement for EU nationals in the UK was identified by the British government as one of the benefits of Brexit, allowing the country to devise a new immigration system.
- Security
The EU and UK have been at pains to emphasise the importance of continuing co-operation in the fight against terrorism and organised crime, although talks in this area were complicated by Britain’s determination to escape the ECJ’s jurisdiction.
But ahead of the deal being finalised, EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier confirmed the sides had found ways to maintain “close co-operation” on crucial matters including the work of the bloc’s crime-fighting agencies Europol and Eurojust, and the sharing of criminals’ DNA data.
Brussels said the deal “builds new operational capabilities, taking account of the fact that the UK, as a non-EU member . . . will not have the same facilities as before”.
The deal establishes that security co-operation can be suspended if the UK breaks away from the European Convention on Human Rights.
https://www.ft.com/content/8e6db389-9e09-4c00-9b49-687a2dafd2ca
#17 en 30 años íbamos a pasar de tener el 25% de la riqueza del mundo al 15%
Imagino que el COVID (y lo que pueda venir después) acelerará bastante el proceso
Han ganado en la pesca y ya XD el resto como dicen es prácticamente vasallaje comercial, no deciden ninguna norma pero tienen que cumplirlas para comerciar con la UE.
Apuesto a que en breve veremos nuevas normativas de la UE específicamente para joder a Inglaterra.
Pero eh, Europa no sabe negociar y piratas rules the waves. Las waves de su país si, pero en lo que no son waves de su país están jodidos y de rodillas frente a lo que decida Europa
#45 lo dudo bastante, también han dicho que iban a poner mecanismos para vigilarse recíprocamente con sanciones. Imagino que eso significará la congelación de muchas de las normas comerciales. Yo creo que fundamentalmente se habrá ganado tiempo para que en 5 años se cierren las condiciones definitivas
Los medios de comunicación probrexit haciendo bien su trabajo, pero la realidad es que es un brexit bien duro para ellos. A pastar.
5. Migration
Current British and EU expatriates have their rights safeguarded by the UK’s 2019 withdrawal agreement with the bloc, but big changes to migration arrangements take effect from January 1.
Britons will no longer have the benefit of European freedom of movement: the right to go to any EU member state and seek to work and live there on the same basis as the country’s own citizens.
Instead, Britons will rely on a visa-waiver programme to travel to the EU for short stays, and on member states’ national rules for the right to work.
Ending free movement for EU nationals in the UK was identified by the British government as one of the benefits of Brexit, allowing the country to devise a new immigration system.
Quisiera saber cuanto nos afecta esto a nosotros a la hora de ir a UK. Ahora los británicos van a tener pedir visas de trabajo. Tambien habrá que ver como afecta esto a tema de sanidad y mierdas. Porque no se si perderán el derecho a sanidad de tarjeta europea.
Va a ser un follon esto de la inmigración. "Supongo" que el nuevo sistema de inmigración afectará a países "conflictivos".
A UK le va a ir bien, es una potencia económica muy fuerte y de las más que aportaba. A Unión Europea. Yo me preocuparía más de España, la cual la crisis del coronavirus a la crisis que ya lastraba más no disponer de las mismas ventajas que ya tenia al comerciar con Reino Unido y ligado a sus turistas... por mucho mal que le pueda llegar a ir a UK, que lo dudo, tened por seguro que no será ni la mitad de mal que le irá a Españita.
Los anglosajones son expertos en vender relatos favorables para su eh penis pero la realidad es que están jodidos
Veremos lo que dicen los expertos del tema, pero por lo que he leído por encima, UK siempre ha querido desde el principio una independencia total sobre Europa. Es decir, no querían saber nada de ellos y que les dejasen en paz.
Veremos como afecta esto, porque ahora UK tendrs que negociar con cada uno de los países de la UE y viceversa, en temas de inmigración.
Sobre el papel y lo que indican, se ha apostado por un brexit duro por parte de UK. Veremos que dice el futuro
Todo el mundo rabiando de UK pero de 51 post 5 son tuyos rabiando de españa, en un thread sobre UK-UE, que españa tiene bastantes defectos lo sabemos todos y que deberian de cambiar muchas cosas tambien, pero ello no hace que UK sea un paraiso para vivir eeh, podrias vivir mejor como podrias vivir peor que en españa
Yo de Europa les apretarla las tuercas con el tema de las regulaciones alimenticias que son uno de los motivos por los que se fueron. Ellos pedían más transgénicos y más libertad para hormonar el ganado, yo pondría una nueva normativa europea de "la salud" que exija más carnes y verduras bio, y a ver si con suerte eso beneficia a los castellanos aragoneses, murcianos y demás cultivos españoles
A ver si nos piden un visado para ir allí y dejamos de ir, toda Europa va a Londres cada dos por tres, que les den por culo.
Más Madrid y menos Londres