francine: mark littlewood, director of the institute of economic affairs, and simon kennedy of bloombergry much. up next, we speak extensively to jamie dimon, who rejects conventional wisdom on slow growth. this is bloomberg. ♪ francine: i am francine lacqua in london. this is "brexit: what is next?" here is sebastian salek. sebastian: the last policy announcement of the are came as policymakers walk the line between managing inflation and growth. the economy will call next year as they see suspending -- see spending weaken. meanwhile, the weak pound will push a price. the chairman of the biggest bank, hsbc, has outlined how the u.k. government can easily economic impact of the brexit. francineexclusively to lacqua, douglas flint. douglas: if our customers find things awkward and ugly, that will affect economic activity. that is no good for the economy. it is in our best interest to ensure things go as smoothly as possible, which i certainly think it's necessary. sebastian: you can watch the full interview at 8:00 p.m. yucatÁn today. global news 24 hours a day, powered by more than 2600