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After Brexit
EAN13
9782376470809
Éditeur
Association Europe-Finances-Régulations (AEFR)
Date de publication
Collection
Revue d'économie financière
Langue
français
Fiches UNIMARC
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  • Aide EAN13 : 9782376470809
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Published in French and English editions, Pervenche Berès has pleased to send
to you issue 148 of the Revue d’Économie Financière (REF), which focuses on
“After Brexit”, and has been coordinated with Sylvie Matherat, former deputy
director general of the Banque de France and former member of the executive
board of the Deutsche Bank group.

Bringing together 19 authors and 17 articles, including a newly created
section entitled “Finance and Literature” and a “Financial History Chronicle”,
this issue is divided into three chapters:

\- Why Did We Get to This Point?

\- Brexit State of Play: Almost Two Years After the Breakup, Where Do We
Stand?

\- What Is To Be Done?

Six years after the referendum that decided Brexit, this issue of the Revue
d'Économie Financière proposes to take stock of the extent of developments to
date and the various prospects for the future, both from the point of view of
the United Kingdom and the European Union.

This period of time seems sufficient, particularly given the neutralization of
the Covid years, to take a forward-looking and dispassionate look at the
changes to be expected.

After a general article that places this referendum in its historical and
political context and proposes an analysis of the underlying reasons for this
event, this issue focuses on the following two main themes: the economic,
commercial and financial consequences as they are manifested today and the
possible developments, particularly from the point of view of the European
Union, which must take the initiative again on a certain number of subjects
for which the departure of the United Kingdom marks a definite break.

This issue of the REF shows how Brexit, from an economic and financial point
of view, has been technically managed in the most efficient way possible. It
explains the stakes in defining an optimal cooperation framework while all the
conflicting issues on both sides of the Channel have not yet been resolved and
each side will take a new look at legislation that until now was identical.
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