- The Economic Secretary to the Treasury is visiting Berlin as
part of longstanding commitment to closer financial services
collaboration between UK and Germany
-
will make a keynote
speech to leaders in German financial services at the
Finanzmarktklausur conference in Berlin on Thursday
- The visit forms part of the government’s strategy to engage
with European counterparts and deepen financial services
regulatory links with Member States and the EU
A NEW AND CLOSER relationship between the UK and
Germany is expected to be a core theme of Economic Secretary
Andrew Griffith’s visit to Berlin on Thursday.
As part of the long-planned visit, the Minister will host a
breakfast roundtable with German financial services and banking
chief executives.
He will also make a keynote speech on Thursday morning to senior
industry leaders in the financial services conference –
Finanzmarktklausur - before meeting his government
counterparts.
The Minister will make the case for close cooperation in
financial services between UK and Germany following the progress
made with the Windsor framework and is expected to say:
“The Windsor Framework, something many said couldn’t be done,
shows what we can achieve when we put our minds together.
“It provides solutions that help with the practical
implementation of the Protocol, supports trade between Great
Britain and Northern Ireland, and offers a sustainable solution
that will be in the UK's economic interest.
“In financial services, the Treasury stands ready to continue
conversations with our European partners on enhancing regulatory
cooperation.”
The Minister is also expected to underline the UK’s enduring
commitment to high standards of financial services regulation. He
is expected to say on the financial services sector:
“Let me be completely clear, we do not want, in any way, to
deregulate for the sake of deregulation. And in no way will we
put European financial stability at risk. It would not benefit
anyone to do so.
“We are partners in all of the main international financial
bodies – the FSB, the IMF, the World Bank, the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision, OECD, G7 and G20, Committee on the Global
Financial System, the International Association of Insurance
Supervisors and the International Association of Deposit Insurers
(IADI), to name a few.
“In these forums, and others, Germany and the UK are often
aligned in seeking to reinforce cooperation, such as addressing
the emergence of new standards like those of the International
Sustainability Standards Board.
“The City of London’s success is, in addition to our
language, legal system and skilled workers, down to our high
regulatory standards.”
The Minister is expected to visit other European capitals in the
coming weeks and months as part of the UK government’s
longstanding commitment to broaden and deepen relations in
financial services between the UK and EU counterparts.