Three-quarters of UK firms say Brexit deal has
not boosted business
British Chamber of Commerce present government with
urgent recommendations as members report struggling to sell into EU
Workers at a manufacturing company. Of BCC members
surveyed, 77% of firms said the post-Brexit deal with the EU had not helped
them to expand.
Heather
Stewart
Wed 21 Dec
2022 22.30 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/dec/21/brexit-deal-not-boosted-business-uk-firms
More than
three-quarters of firms say the government’s post-Brexit trade deal with the EU
has not helped them to expand their business in the last two years despite
promises that it was an “oven-ready” deal.
A survey by
the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) has prompted the business lobby group to
present the government with five urgent recommendations for enhancing the
agreement, which has left many exporters struggling to sell into the EU under
the current terms.
More than
half (56%) of the BCC members surveyed who trade with the EU said they had
experienced problems complying with new rules for exporting goods, while 45%
reported issues trading in services. Overall, as many as 77% of firms trading
under the deal said it had not helped them to increase sales or expand.
The BCC’s
director general, Shevaun Haviland, said: “Businesses feel they are banging
their heads against a brick wall as nothing has been done to help them, almost
two years after the TCA [trade and cooperation agreement] was first agreed. The
longer the current problems go unchecked, the more EU traders go elsewhere, and
the more damage is done.”
The group’s
members, the majority of which are small and medium-sized businesses,
highlighted difficulties administering EU rules on VAT; inconsistent
application of customs rules; and new limits on business travel.
On
regulation, two-thirds of members said they would prefer to continue using the
EU’s CE mark of product quality, instead of switching to the UK’s new post-Brexit
equivalent, the UKCA.
The shadow
international trade secretary, Nick Thomas-Symonds, said: “This is a damning
report and shows the mess the Conservative government have made over trade
policy. For over three-quarters of businesses to say that agreements struck by
the government are not helping them to grow or increase their sales is
unacceptable.”
The TCA was
the core of Boris Johnson’s “oven ready” Brexit deal. The then prime minister
announced that it had been struck on Christmas Eve two years ago.
It allows
UK goods to avoid EU tariffs but imposes additional customs and regulatory
checks and other “non-tariff barriers”, as Britain opted to be outside the EU’s
customs union and single market.
The TCA is
due to be reviewed in 2026, when it will have been in operation for five years,
but the BCC is calling on the government to negotiate some changes immediately.
“There are
clearly some structural problems built into the TCA which cannot be addressed
until it is reviewed in 2026. But as we set out in our report to government
there are some issues that do not need to wait on months of negotiations or
major reviews to be fixed,” said Haviland.
One key
demand is for the government to seek an early resolution to the standoff over
the Northern Ireland protocol, to “stabilise” the trading relationship with the
EU.
Talks
between the two sides on the protocol are continuing, after Rishi Sunak told
the US president, Joe Biden, that he would like to see the impasse ended before
next year’s 25th anniversary of the Good Friday agreement.
Controversial
legislation championed by Liz Truss that would bypass the protocol, which the EU
had warned could lead to a trade war, appears to have been shelved for the
moment while negotiations take place.
The BCC’s
other proposals include seeking an agreement to lift veterinary checks on
agrifood exports; and negotiating an opt-out from the rule that forces small
exporters to work with a “fiscal representative” based in the EU, in order to
levy VAT.
Echoing
other trade bodies including manufacturers’ group Make UK, the BCC would also
like to see the CE mark continue to apply to goods sold in Britain.
The BCC’s
call for action from the government came as research from the Centre for
European Reform (CER) thinktank claimed Brexit had shaved 5.5% off GDP, and
cost £40bn in tax revenues.
In a new
report, the CER’s John Springford compares Britain’s performance since Brexit
with a basket of similar economies.
Using this
approach, known as the doppelgänger method, he finds that the economy is likely
to have been £30bn, or 5.5% smaller in the second quarter of 2022, than it
might have been had Brexit not happened. This is at the high end of recent
estimates.
Springford
argues that the weaker economy has had a knock-on effect on public finances,
contributing to Sunak’s decision to increase taxes.
“If the UK
economy had grown in line with the doppelgänger, tax revenues would have been
around £40bn higher on an annual basis,” he said.
The
Conservative peer Gavin Barwell, who was previously Theresa May’s chief of
staff during the then prime minister’s fraught Brexit negotiations, urged his
colleagues to acknowledge the impact of leaving the EU on the economy.
“Our
politicians can’t go on ignoring this economic self-harm for ever. That doesn’t
mean we have to rejoin, but it does mean we need to reduce the very damaging
barriers to trade that we have introduced with our nearest neighbours,” he
said.
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