This article considers the potential impact of the withdrawal of the UK on EU financial services law and its institutional arrangements. While speculation is currently perilous, this article suggests that the impact of Brexit on EU financial governance will be contained and most likely limited. The greatest uncertainty relates to the EU’s evolving supervisory/institutional arrangements. Brexit may be one of the factors which leads to a significant future empowerment of the European Supervisory Authorities, and in particular the European Securities and Markets Authority. But it is only one of a range of complex, dynamic and symbiotic political forces, institutional interests, legal constraints and functional challenges which must combine in ...
This article examines the various possible scenarios for the UK financial services sector post-Brexi...
The upcoming negotiations on the UK’s exit from the EU can be expected to take particular account of...
This study, which is prepared by Policy Department A at the request of the ECON Committee, addresse...
This article considers the potential impact of the withdrawal of the UK on EU financial services law...
This article considers the implications of Brexit for EU financial governance. It first examines the...
The financial services industry is of central importance to the UK economy. It represents some 7% of...
This article argues that the forces which shape how the EU engages with international financial gove...
As the UK begins to understand the implications of the Brexit vote, the status of its financial serv...
In the negotiations between the European Union and the United Kingdom over their future relationship...
This paper analyses the policy developments concerning the Single Market in finance in the context o...
Nearly 2.2m people work in financial services in Britain, which is a global centre of excellence in ...
The EU/UK negotiations on Brexit are now imminent following the formal notification by Prime Ministe...
Brexit raises a set of important questions with reference to the Single Market, especially in financ...
This article examines the various possible scenarios for the UK financial services sector post-Brexi...
This article seeks to present the key issues which Brexit is raising for financial services based in...
This article examines the various possible scenarios for the UK financial services sector post-Brexi...
The upcoming negotiations on the UK’s exit from the EU can be expected to take particular account of...
This study, which is prepared by Policy Department A at the request of the ECON Committee, addresse...
This article considers the potential impact of the withdrawal of the UK on EU financial services law...
This article considers the implications of Brexit for EU financial governance. It first examines the...
The financial services industry is of central importance to the UK economy. It represents some 7% of...
This article argues that the forces which shape how the EU engages with international financial gove...
As the UK begins to understand the implications of the Brexit vote, the status of its financial serv...
In the negotiations between the European Union and the United Kingdom over their future relationship...
This paper analyses the policy developments concerning the Single Market in finance in the context o...
Nearly 2.2m people work in financial services in Britain, which is a global centre of excellence in ...
The EU/UK negotiations on Brexit are now imminent following the formal notification by Prime Ministe...
Brexit raises a set of important questions with reference to the Single Market, especially in financ...
This article examines the various possible scenarios for the UK financial services sector post-Brexi...
This article seeks to present the key issues which Brexit is raising for financial services based in...
This article examines the various possible scenarios for the UK financial services sector post-Brexi...
The upcoming negotiations on the UK’s exit from the EU can be expected to take particular account of...
This study, which is prepared by Policy Department A at the request of the ECON Committee, addresse...