
Passporting
Passporting allows a firm registered in the European Economic Area (EEA) to do business in any other EEA state without the need for further authorization from that country. As a result, financial services companies located there have lost their passporting rights throughout the EEA and will need to establish a subsidiary within an EEA country in order to regain those passporting rights. Brexit led to the loss of the UK's EEA passporting rights, which in the coming years could mean the disruption of as much as 20 percent of the UK’s investment and capital markets revenue. Passporting eliminates regulatory barriers to free trade between EEA member states, making trade between these states as easy as — and, in some ways, easier than — trade between, for example, U.S. states. Passporting eliminates regulatory barriers to free trade between EEA member states, making trade between these states as easy as — and, in some ways, easier than — trade between, for example, U.S. states.

What Is Passporting?
Passporting allows a firm registered in the European Economic Area (EEA) to do business in any other EEA state without the need for further authorization from that country.
Passporting is particularly relevant to financial and banking firms located in the Eurozone with cross-border operations.



Understanding Passporting
Often companies based outside of the EEA will get authorized in one EEA state. The company will then use the passporting rights it receives from that country to either open an establishment elsewhere in the EEA or provide cross-border services.
Passporting is a valuable asset for a multinational company. It eliminates the red tape associated with gaining authorization from each country, a process that can be lengthy and costly for a business. Passporting eliminates regulatory barriers to free trade between EEA member states, making trade between these states as easy as — and, in some ways, easier than — trade between, for example, U.S. states.
For financial companies in the EEA, once a firm is established and authorized in one European Union (EU) country, it can apply for the right to provide defined services across the EU or to open branches in other countries, with only a small number of additional requirements. This authorization can be a firm's financial services "passport".
Passporting eliminates the red tape associated with gaining authorization from each country, a process that can be lengthy and costly for a business.
Brexit and Passporting
After Brexit, where the U.K. voted to leave the European Union in June of 2016, financial markets experienced a high level of uncertainty, as no one knew what would happen to the U.K. economy. Many speculated that some multinational companies, especially larger international banks, would leave the U.K. and base their operations elsewhere to retain their passporting rights and access to the single market.
The UK left the EEA in 2020. As a result, financial services companies located there have lost their passporting rights throughout the EEA and will need to establish a subsidiary within an EEA country in order to regain those passporting rights. Otherwise, they could be subject to the same stringent regulations as any other non-EEA country wishing to do business in the EEA.
The number of jobs the UK financial services industry could lose post-Brexit.
Since Brexit has been completed, analysts are trying to forecast the economic impact on the U.K. and its financial sector. About 5,500 British financial services firms had passporting rights pre-Brexit. The loss of EEA passporting rights will thus mean some sort of disruption of as much as 20% of the UK’s investment and capital markets revenue.
In just a few years after losing the passport, the UK could lose 10,000 finance jobs, which could have a serious impact on the economy, especially since those jobs tend to be higher-paying. Without regulatory equivalence post-Brexit, the UK financial services industry could lose as many as 35,000 jobs. That could mean a loss of £5 billion of tax revenue seven percent of the UK’s total economic output.
However, this damage could be mitigated depending on whether the UK and the EU agree on new terms post-Brexit. Some jurisdictions, like the Netherlands, are taking steps to allow UK firms to regain their operations within the EEA via special consideration. Many firms within the UK are also taking steps to ensure that passporting remains uninterrupted by establishing subsidiaries abroad.
Related terms:
Article 50
Article 50 is the clause of the European Union's Lisbon Treaty that outlines how to leave the EU. read more
Brexit (British Exit from the European Union)
Brexit refers to the U.K.'s withdrawal from the European Union after voting to do so in a June 2016 referendum. read more
Brexodus
Brexodus refers to the mass exit of individuals and corporations that Brexit, the U.K.'s divorce from the EU, is predicted to potentially cause. read more
European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement
The European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement is an agreement made in 1992 that brought together the European Union (EU). read more
European Sovereign Debt Crisis
The European debt crisis refers to the struggle faced by Eurozone countries in paying off debts they had accumulated over decades. It began in 2008 and peaked between 2010 and 2012. read more
European Union (EU)
The European Union (EU) is a group of countries that acts as one economic unit in the world economy. Its official currency is the euro. read more
Multinational Corporation (MNC)
A multinational corporation has its facilities and other assets in at least one country other than its home country. read more
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) was a proposed trade deal between the European Union and the United States. read more