Britain | EU-UK negotiations

The risk of Britain leaving the EU with no trade deal remains high

Compromise ought to be possible but is not guaranteed by year-end

|BRUSSELS AND LONDON

IF BREXIT-WEARY BRITONS hoped they would be able to read about something other than deadlocked talks once they had left the EU, they were disappointed this week. The transition period into which Britain has gone lasts only until the end of the year, by which time a trade deal needs to be done. But when negotiations began on February 3rd, the differences between the two sides seemed as wide as ever.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “There may be trouble ahead”

Meet the new boss: What it takes to be a CEO in the 2020s

From the February 8th 2020 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

A57 Snake Pass in the Peak District, Derbyshire.

Why Britain has fallen behind on road safety

More than 1,600 people still die each year in road collisions

Stock price information displayed on a board at the London Stock Exchange.

Britain’s brokers are diversifying and becoming less British

London’s depleted stockmarket is forcing them to change


Sculpture by Charles Jencks of DNA double helix Cambridge University.

What a buzzy startup reveals about Britain’s biotech sector

Lots of clever scientists, not enough business nous


Britain’s government lacks a clear Europe policy

It should be more ambitious over getting closer to the EU

The Rachel Reeves theory of growth

The chancellor says it’s her number-one priority. We ask her what that means for Britain