
British politicians insisted that the Brexit bill would not be paid if the negotiations ended in no deal. The final bill for leaving the EU is £40.8bn filed in Brussels, a greater sum than previously forecast according to accounts.
Officials had estimated the final cost
would be £39billion - £1.8bn less than the EU amount contained in the EU’s
consolidated budget report for 2020.
The final bill would have been higher,
almost £43bn, but Brussels owes the UK £1.8bn for its share of fines imposed by
the bloc before the end of the Brexit transition period at the end of last
year.
Ministers believed the final Brexit bill
would be less than £39bn because the numerous Brexit extensions meant that the
total was decreased thanks to the UK’s contributions to the EU Budget.
The Office for Budget Responsibility
said in November there was about £25bn left to pay by 2057. About £18bn will be
paid in the first five years, the BBC has reported.
News of the final withdrawal settlement
comes amid tension between Brussels and London over the Northern Ireland
Protocol which was created to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland.
It ties Northern Ireland to a variety of
EU customs checks, which has resulted in trade disruption since its
implementation in January.
The financial settlement was agreed
during tense talks over the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement.
Both sides signed off on a method to calculate
what was owed in 2017 but the Withdrawal Agreement itself was not ratified
until 2019.
Agreement on the financial settlement was a precondition for the trade talks which ended on Christmas Eve last year with a deal.
Some £197.8m is due to be paid in 2021
with the rest paid out over several decades, according to the EU accounts.
The bill is divided into two parts, one
is related to outstanding spending commitments made when the UK was a member
state.
The other part covers pension
liabilities and health insurance for EU staff.
The figures were first reported by the
RTE broadcaster, which said that the EU accounts had not yet been signed off by
auditors.
Tony Murphy, Ireland’s member of the EU’s Court of Auditors, said the figure was unlikely to change.
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