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EU laws 'will hit online trade' | EU laws 'will hit online trade' |
(10 minutes later) | |
European Union laws on cross-border trade will hurt online sales and may cause legal chaos, UK business leaders have warned. | European Union laws on cross-border trade will hurt online sales and may cause legal chaos, UK business leaders have warned. |
Some smaller firms, especially those relying on internet sales, may have to end non-UK business, the CBI said. | Some smaller firms, especially those relying on internet sales, may have to end non-UK business, the CBI said. |
Under EU proposals, a UK company selling abroad may have to comply with the laws of all 27 member countries rather than just domestic rules. | Under EU proposals, a UK company selling abroad may have to comply with the laws of all 27 member countries rather than just domestic rules. |
Financial and legal service providers would also suffer, the CBI said. | Financial and legal service providers would also suffer, the CBI said. |
'Legal quagmire' | 'Legal quagmire' |
Under current rules, companies selling goods or services to other EU nations are generally subject to their domestic law. | |
[The proposals] will produce substantive new law and turn accepted cross-border trade principles on their head John Cridland, CBI deputy director-general | [The proposals] will produce substantive new law and turn accepted cross-border trade principles on their head John Cridland, CBI deputy director-general |
However, if the European Commission's changes went through, the seller would have to comply with rules in the buyer's country. | However, if the European Commission's changes went through, the seller would have to comply with rules in the buyer's country. |
The consumer contract legislation needs to be re-examined before a "legal quagmire" ensued, CBI deputy director-general John Cridland said. | |
"The proposed legislation was sold as a simple legal tidying-up exercise when the Commission embarked on the process but has turned into a major operation. | "The proposed legislation was sold as a simple legal tidying-up exercise when the Commission embarked on the process but has turned into a major operation. |
"It will produce substantive new law and turn accepted cross-border trade principles on their head." | "It will produce substantive new law and turn accepted cross-border trade principles on their head." |
Mr Cridland added that businesses would have three choices if the legislation went unchanged. | Mr Cridland added that businesses would have three choices if the legislation went unchanged. |
"They can spend time and money getting to grips with the varied and conflicting legal regimes of each member state they trade with; chance their arm that their processes will meet the required standards; or, most worrying, stop trading with some countries altogether." | "They can spend time and money getting to grips with the varied and conflicting legal regimes of each member state they trade with; chance their arm that their processes will meet the required standards; or, most worrying, stop trading with some countries altogether." |
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