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Why Milan could be Europe’s post-Brexit financial hub

Milan has also joined the race among European cities to pick up the post-Brexit spoils should London’s financial institutions choose to shift their operations elsewhere.

Why Milan could be Europe's post-Brexit financial hub
Milan is vying to be Europe's post-Brexit financial and business hub. Photo: Melanie Bowman

“With Brexit, we want to bring a piece of London’s financial [services] to Milan,” Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi announced jubilantly last week.

Milan’s recently elected mayor, Giuseppe Sala, was even quicker to flag-up his city’s attributes, saying on the day Britain voted to leave the EU that the outcome “could be an opportunity for Milan”.

The Lombardy city, already Italy’s financial and start-up hub, could become “a land of opportunity”, he added.

“We would need to find ways to facilitate such a relocation, which would bring jobs, prestige and even greater visibility to our city.”

One of those ways could be to create a tax-free zone in the area of the city where the World Expo exhibition was held last year. It’s an idea that formed part of Sala’s election campaign and was given fresh impetus by the Brexit vote.

Photo: Angel/Flickr

It’s not just the banks Italy wants. Long before the UK’s referendum on June 23rd, Renzi was hatching a plan to snare two EU agencies – the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the European Banking Authority (EBA) – away from London and resettle them in Milan.

Amid all the gloomy statistics on Italy’s economy, it seems to pass unnoticed that the country’s pharmaceutical industry is the second largest in Europe in terms of production, while Italy is the world’s number one exporter of medicines per capita.

“'Made in Italy' is not just limited to Gucci and Prada,” Luca Pani, who heads up Italy’s drugs agency (Aifa), told the online pharmaceutical sector news site, Farmacia33, a day before the UK's vote.

“We boast an incredibly high quality of pharmaceutical products.”

But can Milan compete with the other European cities, namely Paris, Frankfurt, Dublin, Madrid and Amsterdam, which have also pitched themselves as viable contenders to London?

Indeed, the industrious northern city is best known for its fashion designers, but it is also home to the stock exchange, an abundance of company headquarters and the prestigious Bocconi university – the highest ranked university for economics in Europe outside of the UK.

Milan's Naviglio Grande canal. Photo: Paolo Margari/Flickr

Then there’s the flourishing start-up scene, which was given some additional vigour as the city spruced itself up ahead of hosting the Expo last year. Incidentally, the Expo helped earn Milan the number one spot in The New York Times’ list of 52 ‘best places to visit’ in 2015.

With over 800 start-ups now based there, Milan came 10th in a ranking last year of the 15 most welcoming European cities for their start-up ecosystem.

The city is also home to some great restaurants, the La Scala opera house, a dazzling Gothic cathedral, all the while being on the doorstep of Italy’s lake district. 

For Milan’s Chamber of Commerce, the city must embrace the opportunity to make the most out of Brexit.

“The challenge is useful and strategic because it engages the system of Milan, the region and the national government to strive for ever higher levels of excellence,” the chamber’s president, Carlo Sangalli, said in a statement sent to The Local.

“In particular, the [potential] transfer of the two EU agencies, and more generally, the presence of multinationals which [might] leave the English capital, could represent a great opportunity for our area.”

The idea of creating a tax-free zone bodes well for the city’s future, which could also be beneficial for small and medium-sized companies, especially those in the service sector, Sangalli added.

“It will make the exhibition site increasingly attractive, thus avoiding the risk of it becoming isolated from the rest of the city.”

But while Milan might be attractive for some Italy-related operations in London, “dealmakers generally want to be where the action is,” Carmello Brunetta, an Italian trader who lived in London for a decade, told The Local.

“So I suspect that just as now, most business will be concentrated in the main financial centres, probably Frankfurt and Paris, if Brexit does come about.”

But will either of those be as appealing in terms of lifestyle?

For Pietro Piccinetti, the CEO of Fiera di Roma, an events management company, another Italian city should throw its name in the hat: Rome.

“If Italy plays the game well, Brexit could bring good opportunities for our country, Milan and Rome – two cities which have an affinity with London,” he told The Local.

“Milan could become a centre of the global financial landscape, while Rome, which has the highest concentration of pharmaceutical companies [in Italy], must also fight with conviction to host the EMA and EBA.”

The move could also help reverse the ‘brain drain’, Piccinetti added. Over the last decade or so, thousands of young Italians have fled to London for work.

“It could finally make Italy a popular destination, rich in opportunities and stimulating, not just a colourful holiday destination.”

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BREXIT

Will Brits in Italy face travel problems under new EES passport system?

The EU's new Entry & Exit System (EES) of enhanced passport controls is due to come into force later this year, but will this create more headaches for non-EU nationals who need to prove their Italian residency rights?

Will Brits in Italy face travel problems under new EES passport system?

Currently scheduled to start in autumn 2024 (unless it’s delayed again, which is possible) the EU’s new Entry & Exit System is an enhanced passport check at external EU borders.

You can find a full explanation of the new system and what it means for travellers HERE.

Those crossing an external EU or Schengen border for the first time will be required to complete EES ‘pre-registration’ formalities, including facial scan and fingerprinting.

Several groups are exempt from EES, and one of them is non-EU nationals who have a residency permit or long-stay visa for an EU country.

A European Commission spokesman told The Local: “Non-EU citizens residing in the EU are not in the scope of the EES and will not be subject to pre-enrollment of data in the EES via self-service systems. The use of automation remains under the responsibility of the Member States and its availability in border crossing points is not mandatory.

“When crossing the borders, holders of EU residence permits should be able to present to the border authorities their valid travel documents and residence permits.”

READ ALSO: What will EES passport system mean for foreigners living in Europe?

But there have understandably been questions about how this exemption will work in practice.

Most airports, ports or terminals have two passport queues – EU and non-EU. It remains unclear whether the non-EU queue will now have a separate section for those who are exempt from EES.

It appears that exempt groups will not be able to use the automated passport scanners – since those cannot scan additional documents like residency permits – but should instead use manned passport booths.

What does this mean for travel between Italy and the UK?

It seems that nothing will therefore change for those who already have to show their Italian residency documents along with their passport when travelling to and from the UK (or another non-EU country) in order to avoid having their passport incorrectly stamped.

UK citizens who were legally resident in Italy before the end of the Brexit transition period are in a somewhat unusual position, as Italy is one of a handful of “declaratory” countries in the EU where getting a post-Brexit residency card (Italy’s is known as the ‘carta di soggiorno‘) was optional, rather than compulsory.

The British government has long recommended that British nationals who were resident in Italy before Brexit should obtain the card as it’s the easiest way to prove residency rights and avoid delays at the border.

In practice, many of Italy’s British residents have since found that the post-Brexit residency card is also necessary in order to complete various bureaucratic procedures within Italy.

READ ALSO: EES: Could the launch of Europe’s new border system be delayed again?

But will the EES system mean that the card now becomes a de facto requirement when travelling between Italy and the UK?

The British government has not issued any updated guidance on the matter in light of the introduction of EES, and the British Embassy in Rome did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Local.

Although EES does not change any rules relating to residency or travel, it seems likely that it will be more hassle to travel without a ‘carta di soggiorno’ than it is now.

As always, our advice is that getting the card, if you haven’t already, will probably save you a considerable amount of time and trouble, both within Italy and when travelling.

You can find our full Q&A on EES HERE.

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