EU wants post-Brexit transitional period to end no later than 31 December 2020
By
David
27 December 2017 (Edited )
Share This Article
Christian Science Monitor
By

27 December 2017 (Edited )
Share This Article
Christian Science Monitor

David H. Boggs
President/CEO
ACRO Global
Publisher
TourismMarketer
ACRO Global
Publisher
TourismMarketer
Follow @davidhboggs

Rating | Show Individual Votes |
Views | 176 views. Averaging 176 views per day. |
Related Articles |
Senior Member
Usergroup: Administrator
Joined: 30 January 2012
Location: New England USA Web: DavidHBoggs.com
Total Articles: 2808
Total Comments: 498
This is the first official confirmation of a specific date to be set as a goal by EU Brexit negotiators.
Transition talks are expected to begin in January 2018, and with any luck lead to agreement on a UK-EU free-trade deal by January 2021.
But given the glacial pace at which talks/discussions/negotiations have been moving since June 2016, the idea of reaching a workable deal in 3 years from next month sounds very much like wishful thinking.
Anyone disagree?