Press
Avec Londres, un possible divorce mais pas de procédure
09 May 2016
La Croix
Plusieurs scénarios sont donc possibles. "Pour certains ’’brexiters”, il faudrait un accord comme celui qui lie l’UE et le Canada (liés par un 'partenariat stratégique' économique sans équivalent, NDLR)", indique Agata Gostynska, chercheuse au Centre for European Reform, un groupe de réflexion britannique.
The EU is Northern Ireland's biggest trading partner
09 May 2016
Belfast Telegraph
As the Centre for European Reform explains, and I quote: "In order to maintain access to EU markets, a Britain on the outside would have to sign up to many of the EU's rules. As a non-participant in the EU’s institutions, it would have little say over the rules."
El rechazo social amenaza el acuerdo comercial entre la UE y EE UU
08 May 2016
El Pais
Parte del problema, según coinciden los expertos, es la negativa de los negociadores a admitir quiénes serán los perjudicados por el acuerdo comercial. “Para recuperar la confianza de la opinión pública, las autoridades necesitan trasladar expectativas realistas sobre los beneficios del TTIP”, defendía Rem Korteweg, socio del Centro para la Reforma Europea, en un debate sobre el TTIP organizado por el Real Instituto Elcano en Madrid.
Brexit - the day after: What would it be like?
07 May 2016
The Irish Times
"Given that Norway basically has to sign up to pretty much everything substantive, has to abide by freedom of movement and has to pay substantial amounts of money into the EU budget, it's very hard to see how that option would satisfy the UK and how it would satisfy the right wing of the Conservative Party," said Simon Tilford of the Centre for European Reform.
Preparations for a Brexit III: Views from Bulgaria, Cyprus, Luxembourg, Poland, and Portugal
06 May 2016
LSE blog
If Britain votes to leave the EU it will have to negotiate its exit and a new post-withdrawal relationship with the EU, one that will have to be agreed by the remaining 27 EU member states and the European Parliament.
The Spectator podcast: Erdogan's Europe
05 May 2016
What does Davutoglu’s resignation mean for Turkey and the EU?
The collapse of Schengen would have only two winners: Terrorists and populist parties
05 May 2016
The Telegraph
Unprecedented numbers of asylum seekers making their way into Europe have led some member states to close their borders.
What does Davutoglu's resignation mean for Turkey and the EU?
05 May 2016
The Spectator
Ahmet Davutoglu’s resignation comes at a sensitive moment for the EU’s migration deal with Turkey. Why did the prime minister fall from the sultan’s favour, and what does it mean?
A push for Greek cuts even creditors think go too far
05 May 2016
The Wall Street Journal
"It's good that European institutions seem to be acknowledging that the Greek economy cannot sustain further dramatic fiscal tightening," says Simon Tilford, deputy director of the Centre for European Reform, a London think-tank. "But they aren’t able to draw the obvious conclusion that the target needs adjusting. If they do down that road, then they would have to address the debt."
Tok FM: Jaka przyszłość czeka Unię Europejską, jeśli Brytyjczycy zdecydują się ją opuścić? Agata Gostyńska w rozmowie z Jakubem Janiszewskim
04 May 2016
Agata Gostyńska-Jakubowska talks to Jakub Janiszewski of Tok FM about the future of the European Union, if the British decide to leave.
The complicated process of leaving the EU
04 May 2016
Europe online
"The provisions of Article 50 make it clear that the divorce would be a time-consuming and cumbersome process," Agata Gostynska-Jakubowska of the Centre for European Reform said. "If the British vote to leave the EU, there will be no coming back."
CER podcast: Five questions on the implications of a Brexit for the EU
04 May 2016
In the first of a series of podcasts on the implications of a Brexit for the EU, Sophia Besch talks to CER's director of foreign policy Ian Bond.
London's Hong Kong dreams
04 May 2016
Politico
"The idea that Britain could just leave and have complete regulatory autonomy is fanciful," said John Springford, senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform, a pro-European think-tank. "The reason for that should be obvious: London is the EU's principal wholesale financial centre. And there is no way the EU will allow for its financial centre to be outside the EU."
Britain will lose out on a world of trade if leaves EU
03 May 2016
The Yorkshire Post
It is acknowledged that the increase we have seen with trade in the EU is directly linked to our membership of it. The Centre for European Reform says that it has raised trade by 55 per cent, while the Government argue that it has done so by between 68 and 85 per cent. Whatever the exact figure, it is hard to deny that it is a substantial amount.
... more disappointing economic news emerges
02 May 2016
The Herald Scotland
David Bell also helpfully cites estimates (by the Centre for European Reform) of the UK and Scottish contributions to the EU Budget. The annual UK gross payment over the next few years is expected to be around £17 billion.
British companies avoid taking sides in the debate over an EU exit
01 May 2016
The New York Times
Yet so far, the voice of business has been less full-throated than many analysts expected. "Business does seem strangely muted on this," said Simon Tilford, the deputy director of the Centre for European Reform, a research institute in London. "It has been surprising that so few internationally active businesses are prepared to speak out."
If it ain't broke, don't Brexit
30 April 2016
The Economist
In fact, trade between Britain and the rest of the EU is larger than geography alone would predict, according to a recent analysis by the Centre for European Reform, a think-tank. It calculates that the flow of goods and services across the Channel is 55% greater than distance and economic mass alone would imply.
How others see it: The European Union would suffer from Brexit
30 April 2016
The Economist
As the Centre for European Reform, a London-based think-tank, notes in a new report, a British departure would leave the EU “less liberal, more suspicious of science and more protectionist”.
This week's Brexit briefing
29 April 2016
The Wall Street Journal
Here for the pro-EU Centre for European Reform, Agata Gostynska-Jakubowska drills deeper into the questions that surround Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, the clause that most likely would have to be used to negotiate the UK's departure.
Seven reasons Brexiteers are wrong to think EU exit negotiations would be easy
29 April 2016
City A.M
Some eurosceptics think that Brexit negotiations would be a piece of cake. But if Britain decides to leave the EU, it will have no choice but to invoke Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union.