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Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem warned Tuesday that it would be impossible to maintain Europe's financial capital in London if Britain chooses to thwart EU rules after Brexit. "Being quite frank, we can't allow the financial services centre for Europe and the eurozone to be outside Europe and the eurozone and to go its own way in terms of rules and regulation requirements," Dijsselbloem told a European Parliament hearing in Brussels.
"We can't let that happen. We have to take a firm stand on this. There is no alternative there," he said. Dijsselbloem spoke as the government of Prime Minister Theresa May distanced itself from a memo suggesting Britain believed it can keep the privileges of the European single market, while also limiting immigration by European citizens after it leaves the bloc.
Britain is especially eager to preserve the EU's so-called passporting rights that allow banking and financial services, approved by a single member state to apply across the European Union. The memo, caught inadvertently in a photograph, also indicated that Britain would refuse joining the tariff-free European Economic Area, which could also give single market access but only by obeying EU law. But Dijsselbloem, who is also Dutch finance minister, said that his "preferred option" would be that Britain accept all EU rules and regulations on financial services so that this type of set-up could continue.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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