Press

Now two of the government's most senior figures have hinted the UK will continue EU contributions after Brexit

01 December 2016
City A.M
Centre for European Reform director Charles Grant said it could also help buy the UK some goodwill in its negotiations, and help it secure a preferential deal, in line with mentions of “Canada Plus”, seen in the notes of an MP's aide leaving Downing Street this week.

CNBC: Polls suggest 'no' vote will prevail in Italian referendum

01 December 2016
The political fallout of a 'no' vote in Italy's reform referendum would be less than it has been made out to be, says Luigi Scazzieri at the Centre for European Reform.

Downing Street to brief foreign media on Brexit

01 December 2016
Financial Times
Charles Grant, director of think-tank the Centre for European Reform, said: “The people in Brussels are even gloomier than is perhaps justified about Brexit because their only source of information at the moment is the British media.” Recent strident coverage from Britain’s biggest newspapers “surreptitiously erodes the residual goodwill that [other EU countries] feel towards us”, he warned.

CER podcast series: The economics of populism, episode three

John Springford, Martin Hellwig, Agnès Bénassy-Quéré
30 November 2016
In this episode, Martin Hellwig and Agnès Bénassy-Quéré discuss ‘Has trade liberalisation and financial globalisation gone too far?’

Ministers want controls on skilled and unskilled EU workers, say sources

30 November 2016
The Guardian
John Springford, director of research, at the Centre for European Reform, argued that it seemed likely that May would consider a preferential system for Europeans because if not they would face getting no more than a “basic free trade deal” from the EU-27. He also argued that restrictions on skilled workers were also likely if the prime minister wanted to achieve her goal to heavily reduce net migration to the tens of thousands.

Judy Asks: Can Renzi salvage Italy?

30 November 2016
Carnegie Europe
A selection of experts answer a new question from Judy Dempsey on the foreign and security policy challenges shaping Europe's role in the world.

Italy expected to retain key "broker" role on Brexit if Renzi quits

29 November 2016
City A.M
“[Italy] does not seek to profit from the negotiations or to punish the Brits as some other European capitals seem to be doing,” Centre for European Reform expert Luigi Scazzieri told City A.M.

Fillon gives Putin hope for new ally as sanctions zeal fades

29 November 2016
Bloomberg
“We will see how skilled Putin is at playing the Europeans and undermining the EU,” Charles Grant, the head of the Centre for European Reform said in an interview. “If Putin is clever, he will strengthen divisions among Europeans by being reasonable and avoid anything like an invasion to make it harder for them to take a tough line and maintain sanctions.”

A better Britain for the taking

Simon Tilford
28 November 2016
Financial Times
Improve the digital skills of Britons, more than “10m [of whom]s cannot send an email or shop online … universal digital literacy will be as important in this century as traditional literacy was 150 years ago”. (This echoes — or should echo for those who listen — Simon Tilford’s recent point that the UK lags behind badly behind even on traditional literacy.)

Britain's European partners take a hard line on Brexit

26 November 2016
The Economist
Charles Grant of the Centre for European Reform, a think-tank, says Brussels officials are dismayed by the apparent influence of right-wing Eurosceptics on Mrs May. The EU has also long hated Britain’s pick ’n’ mix approach.

Europeans confront a new, zero-sum world

Simon Tilford
25 November 2016
The Wall Street Journal
"Trump is no economic liberal and does not appear to understand how global institutions and norms crafted by the US serve its interests," Simon Tilford, deputy director of the London-based Centre for European Reform wrote. "He may only last one term in office, but the UK cannot afford to assume that Trump’s presidency is just a temporary hiatus before normal service resumes."

Martin Schulz throws spanner in Brussels' political works

25 November 2016
Financial Times
"To his credit, his rough and direct manner sometimes allows him to communicate with voters outside the Brussels bubble,” said Charles Grant, director of the Centre for European Reform. “But his uncompromising commitment to ‘more Europe’ on the traditional model has done nothing to reassure more EU-sceptic voters that the union is able or willing to engage in fundamental reform.”

Italian referendum 2016: The next vote that could ROCK Europe to its core occurs next week

25 November 2016
The Express
Luigi Scazzieri, a fellow at CER, said that “Italy’s seems to be lined up as the next domino to fall to populism” in the referendum next week. In an opinion piece in Prospect magazine, he wrote: “The impact of a “No” vote on Italy’s political stability is likely to be contained. “Renzi’s resignation would not automatically trigger new elections. The Italian president Sergio Mattarella would first explore options for a new government.”

The week in review - More gloomy forecasts and May remains vague

25 November 2016
Financial Times
Charles Grant, head of the Centre for European Reform, said: “Most of the key people in the Brussels institutions have low expectations of what can be achieved in the Brexit negotiations. Indeed, some foresee a serious risk of the Article 50 talks breaking down and of Britain therefore pursuing a very hard, WTO-rules-only, exit.” 
CER podcast series: The economics of populism, episode two

CER podcast series: The economics of populism, episode two

Sophia Besch, David Willetts, Nicholas Crafts
25 November 2016
In this episode, David Willetts and Nicholas Crafts discuss 'Was Brexit a rebellion against globalisation?'

The next vote that could rock Europe to its core occurs next week

Simon Tilford
25 November 2016
The Express
 Simon Tilford, deputy director of the Centre for European Reform (CER), said that an Italian referendum on the eurozone would lead to considerable instability in Europe. Mr Tilford said: “The act of calling that referendum would precipitate a crisis in Europe. It would embolden populist and anti-Europe parties elsewhere.”  

Italian constitutional referendum: Much ado about nothing?

25 November 2016
Prospect
After the victory of "Leave" in the EU referendum and Donald Trump’s election as US President, Italy seems to be lined up as the next domino to fall to populism, with a referendum on constitutional changes scheduled for 4th December.

The £59 billion reckoning

24 November 2016
Bloomberg
John Springford of the Centre for European Reform reckoned that Brexit would leave the economy 3.2 per cent smaller in 2030 than had voters chosen to stay in the EU. "In the long-term then, Brexit means lower spending or higher taxes," Springford said in a report. "The key political question is who will be at the receiving end of these measures."

Tok FM: Kto będzie chciał mieć ostatnie słowo w sprawie Brexitu?

Agata Gostyńska-Jakubowska
24 November 2016
The CER's Agata Gostyńska-Jakubowska speaks to Tok FM about Brexit.

Brexit uncertainty could hit investment in UK, warns German car chief

23 November 2016
The Guardian
Charles Grant, of the Centre for European Reform think-tank, said in a report that the EU was showing “surprising” unity on its red lines for Britain’s departure and was preparing for a hard Brexit that would leave the UK outside the single market. Grant said government pronouncements since October had contributed to “an erosion of the goodwill that EU leaders feel towards the UK. They reckon that UK politics is being driven by emotion rather than reason and that there is not much they can do to prevent a hard Brexit”.