News that the Brexit talks were to be resumed sent the external value of the pound back up again. Political commentators, especially in the UK, began to predict the relatively rapid conclusion of an agreement on future trade relations between the UK and the EU.
They pointed in
particular to the commitment of both parties to “intensify” their
negotiations, working on the basis of submitted legal texts, and to the
softening by the Commission President and Michel Barnier of the
uncompromising rhetoric adopted lasted week by the European Council when
discussing Brexit. Such optimism should be treated with caution. It is
by no means clear that any agreement will be achieved this year and, if
it is, it will certainly fall far short of the seamless continuity in
trade relations between the UK and its neighbours promised by the Leave
campaign in 2016.
All outcomes still possible
The
negotiations will certainly be facilitated by the restructuring of their
format, opening the way for simultaneous progress on differing issues.
But both sides recognise that each individual element of their
negotiations is subordinate to the achievement of an overall political
agreement between the UK and the EU, an agreement which cannot be struck
by Frost and Barnier alone. This political agreement, essentially
between the British Cabinet and the European Council, cannot be taken
for granted. Wide disparities remain between the parties, especially on
the issues of fisheries, competition policy and the governance of the
agreement (dispute settlement). The underlying differences of interest
and philosophy may still prove to be unbridgeable in these areas.
Fisheries should be soluble
It
seems unlikely that any agreement between the EU and UK will founder
(or flounder) on the question of fisheries. A range of compromises
exists between the original demand of the EU that the present quota
system should continue indefinitely and the original British demand that
the system should be abandoned immediately. The negotiations have
already seen some softening of positions on both sides, with the
traditional topics of transitional periods, reviews after a fixed number
of years and financial compensation for the disadvantaged beginning to
figure as elements of an emerging consensus. It has moreover been clear
from the start that both sides see fishing as a pawn in their wider
negotiating strategy.
Other topics are more difficult
Much
more problematic, however, are the questions of competition policy and
the overall governance of the agreement. In their differing but related
ways, both are intimately connected with the underlying nature of Brexit
and the EU’s strategic response to it. The EU is intensely suspicious
of the possibility that a post-Brexit Britain may attempt to exploit
through lax internal regulation and state subsidies its quota-free and
tariff-free access to the Internal Market in order to undercut EU
producers. The EU will want enforceable assurances that any such
attempts can be promptly detected and sanctioned. Their suspicions have
been heightened by the Internal Market Bill and its underlying
assumption that the British government retains the right to break
international treaties when it finds it convenient to do so.
The
British government’s position on this issue is complicated and
uncertain. It predictably wishes to retain for itself the greatest
possible room for domestic economic manoeuvre, a desire reinforced by
the well-publicised desire of Dominic Cummings for lavish public
subsidies in the digital sector; and by the Conservative promise in the
last General Election to “level up” the less prosperous areas of the
country, presumably once more by state subsidy to struggling industries.
On the other hand, many Conservative MPs and commentators are acutely
aware of the recent history of their Party as the resolute opponent of
state intervention. David Frost’s consciousness of this incongruity was
well reflected in his recent remark that if an arbitration forum were
set up to judge on state subsidies after the end of the transition
period, then the UK might well have recourse to it more often than the
EU. It would be historically an eccentric choice for the Conservative
Party if it accepted the economic cataclysm of a “no deal” Brexit, in
order to allow itself to subsidise commercially unviable industries. It
would be an ironic expression of the reclaimed sovereignty supposedly
confirmed by Brexit, recalling the Churchillian definition of a fanatic
as one who by the time he achieves his obsessive goals has forgotten why
he wanted them in the first place.
Similar confusion prevails in
the Conservative mind on the subject of domestic regulatory standards
after Brexit. The government has regularly, if not always entirely
convincingly, disavowed any desire to preside over a general lowering of
these standards. It knows that this would be unpopular with the wider
electorate. But there is within the Conservative Party an important
strain of opinion which holds that the “promise” of Brexit resides
precisely in the UK’s ability to emancipate itself from the bureaucratic
stranglehold of Brussels, with its petty, unnecessary and outdated
regulations. This strain of opinion generally favours the prospect of a
“no deal” Brexit, which supposedly will allow the UK to make a clean and
salutary break (“Liberation Day”) from continental oppression. For this
break to have any economic and political coherence, it must inevitably
involve the dilution of the relatively high regulatory standards on
which the EU’s internal market is based. Ever since the Single European
Act of 1986, there has been a tension between the view of most Member
States that the Single Market should be based on high common standards
and the view of doctrinaire free marketeers that it should rest on the
fewest and lowest common standards possible.
Can Conservative confusion be resolved?
Given
these cross-currents within the Conservative Party, it is very
difficult to predict whether the British government will be able to
adopt any coherent position within the final Brexit negotiations which
will be acceptable to both the EU and the Conservative Party. There are
distinct political attractions for Boris Johnson in allowing a “no deal”
Brexit to occur by default, simply because it is too difficult to
choose between the uncongenial options with which he is confronted. If
Johnson is only able to rally a bare majority of his Parliamentary
colleagues to support a treaty agreed with the EU then this will be
nothing like sufficient to guarantee his continuation as Prime Minister.
It would be an intolerable humiliation for Johnson and his Party if
passage of the treaty through Parliament were dependent upon the
goodwill of the Labour Party. Johnson knows by contrast that blaming the
EU’s intransigence for the damage of a “no deal” Brexit is a tried and
tested way of uniting the Conservative Party, both in the Commons and
among its wider membership.
Johnson may well be further sustained
in this analysis by the knowledge that even the minimal “deal” which is
all that can now be achieved will lead to economic and trading chaos in
the early months of next year. Ever since Theresa May accepted that
Brexit meant leaving the Customs Union and the Internal Market, it has
been clear that a long-term effort of British state planning would be
necessary to mitigate the effects of this decision at the end of any
transition period. May’s and Johnson’s governments failed to make this
effort, partly because undertaking it would advertise the damaging
consequences of their Brexit policies and partly because it was more
ideologically attractive to believe that the private sector could better
meet the burden of adjustment than could the over-burdened British
state, hollowed out by years of underinvestment and outsourcing. It is
only in recent months that the government, already hampered in its
functioning by Covid-19, has been able to bring itself to admit that any
Brexit will involve from next year a gigantic increase in customs and
regulatory formalities. Even now it is standard to cloak this admission
in implausible references to “changes and opportunities,” “investment in
the Customs service” or “moving house.” Such disingenuous rhetoric is
understandably offensive to hard-pressed British business
representatives, who are more struck and worried by the daunting
prospect of lorry parks being hastily constructed in Kent to meet the
overflow of lorries queueing to carry out customs formalities in Dover
from the early months of 2021. The casual admission of Michael Gove
earlier this week that there will in any case be no implementation
period for a “deal” in the first half of 2021 will have shattered an
illusion apparently held by many in the business community that the
transition period, perhaps under another name, might be extended beyond
the end of 2020.
No good choices for Johnson
The Prime
Minister therefore has a number of conflicting arguments to weigh in his
own mind. His courtier press and television reporters will present any
“deal” concluded with the EU as a diplomatic triumph, a triumph moreover
which will somewhat ease the obvious damage to trade with the EU in the
early months of 2021. On the other hand, even with Johnson’s envisaged
“deal,” there will still be damage inflicted at the start of next year
on cross-Channel trade in particular. It will be much more difficult for
him to evade blame for this damage if he has preened himself six weeks
before on the excellence of the “deal” he has extorted from the EU.
There can be little doubt that opposition within the Conservative Party
to a “no deal” Brexit would be muted at worst, perhaps non-existent. Any
“deal-based” Brexit would by contrast be highly controversial within
his own party, his continued leadership of which depends heavily upon
the most radical Eurosceptics within its ranks.
It may well be
that even now, Boris Johnson has no clear idea of where he wishes the
Brexit negotiations to end up. Equally, there is reason to believe that
his closest advisers and Cabinet colleagues continue to be divided on
the issue. Johnson’s continued pursuit of the Brexit negotiations
suggests that he does not want “no deal.” He is, however, dissatisfied
with the deal so far on offer. He may find himself confronted with a
grim paradox: neither having his cake nor eating it. The Brexit project,
designed to increase British decision-making freedom, has ended up
simply creating a range of options for British decision-makers, all of
them equally repugnant.
© Federal Trust
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