Three quarters of UK carmakers fear no-deal Brexit: SMMT

Reuters  |  LONDON 

(Reuters) - Three quarters of businesses in Britain's automotive sector think leaving the next year without a transition deal would hurt them, an industry survey showed on Tuesday.

"Crashing out of the EU would have immediate and devastating impacts, with border chaos disrupting the 'just in time' basis on which our business depends," said Tony Walker, SMMT and Toyota's <7203.T> managing director for

faces an uphill battle to persuade lawmakers to back her plans for in four months time, which involve a transitional deal which preserves the economic status quo for two to three years pending a trade deal that is likely to restrict British firms' access to EU markets.

Some lawmakers in her instead favour leaving the EU with no transition and relying solely on more limited trade access under rules - something opposed by

Walker said WTO rules could lead to months of delays importing parts, and that jobs would go without tariff-free access to markets.

Around four out of every five cars built in Britain are made for export, with the bulk going to the EU.

The SMMT, which opposed Brexit, said 74 percent of its members thought a no-deal would hurt their business versus 9 percent who saw benefits.

More than one in 10 firms had moved jobs abroad and a similar proportion had cut British staff as part of preparations for Brexit, the SMMT added.

(Reporting by David Milliken; editing by Stephen Addison)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, November 28 2018. 02:27 IST