The Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the EU and the UK is an exercise in damage limitation. The UK’s decision to leave the EU, the Customs Union and the Single Market, means it will face numerous obstacles.
However, it was in nobody’s interest to add to these
obstacles, and that was the spirit in which the EU approached the
negotiation.
The Agreement may run to 1,256 pages, but it boils down to some
fairly simple and sensible ideas. Although it is no longer a member of
the EU, the UK still wants to do business with the EU, and the EU
members still want to do business with the UK. So, for the future, there
needs to be a system for ensuring that there are no surprises, or
unfair trading, that would disrupt mutually beneficial business. This is
essentially what the Agreement is all about.
While the UK was a member of the EU, that goal was achieved by having
a common set of business rules, made democratically and together, and
interpreted in a consistent way by the European Court of Justice (ECJ).
These rules could be enforced in national courts. In other words, the
goal of predictable and fair business conditions between the UK and its
fellow EU members was achieved directly by common action.
New understandings
Under the new Agreement, the same goal will be pursued, but
indirectly. As far as trade between the EU and the UK is concerned,
those common rules, made and interpreted in common, will be replaced by
understandings. These understandings, now to be enshrined in
international law through the Agreement, will have legal force, but will
generally only be enforceable under the procedures set out in the
Agreement.
While the EU and the UK will each be free to determine their own
policies on the environment, social and working conditions, and subsidy
controls, Article 9.4 of the Agreement allows for ‘rebalancing’ measures
to be taken by the other side if it feels its own businesses are being
put at a disadvantage. This is supposed to restore the level in the
level playing field.
Most of the text of the Agreement is taken up with procedures for
resolving disputes. Matters currently resolved in national courts under
EU law will have to be settled by political agreement in one of the
myriad of committees set up under the Agreement. This is inherently more
cumbersome.
If the issue cannot be settled in this way, it will go to
arbitration. Instead of the interpretation being done by Judges of the
ECJ, an Arbitration Tribunal set up under the Agreement will have to
interpret the principles in specific cases in the light of both EU and
UK law. As such, arbiters will have not only a legal but also a
political task.
Arbitration: the core idea
An Arbitration Tribunal will consist of three people, chosen from
lists of qualified arbitrators. One will be chosen by the UK and one by
the EU, and the Chair of the Tribunal has to be someone who is not from
the EU or the UK.
To qualify for appointment, an arbitrator will need to have
“demonstrated expertise in law and international trade”. They will all
have to be people “whose independence is beyond doubt”. They will serve
in their individual capacities, and not take instructions from anyone.
They will have to be people who would qualify as judges in their home
countries.
Most likely there will be a lot of intense haggling over the
composition of particular Arbitration Tribunals. The nationality of the
arbitrators and their past records will be scrutinised by the
governments most affected by the issues in dispute. The idea that the
chair must come from outside either the EU or the UK may prove difficult
in practice. It will not always be easy to find suitable chairs who are
neither British nor EU citizens, especially as the work will have to be
done at short notice and under tight time limits.
There are detailed provisions in the Agreement to prevent stalling by
either the EU or the UK in appointing Arbitrators. Once established,
the Tribunals will have to deliver their ruling within 130 days. Within
30 days from this, the affected party will have to say how they will
comply with the ruling.
This entire structure of dispute resolution will be presided over by a
Partnership Council to be chaired jointly by a UK Minister and an EU
Commissioner. It will be assisted by over 20 specialised committees and a
number of working groups, all of which are listed in Title III of the
Agreement.
Even more meetings than before!
There will be even more EU-related meetings for UK officials than in
the past. However, the dynamic will be different. Instead of being able
to build alliances on particular topics with other EU member states, in
future the UK will find itself alone in the room with the European
Commission.
Moreover, the Commission side will have instructions, negotiated in
advance with the 27 member states, so there will be a high degree of
rigidity in the process. As the EU member state most affected by
relations between the UK and the EU, this will be a particular challenge
for Ireland. Cultivating an understanding with the Commission officials
serving on these committees will be a priority.
Parting company gradually
Brexit may be over and done with, but the forces that led to it –
identity politics and suspicion of foreigners – have not gone away. No
longer in the EU, and notwithstanding the provisions of the Agreement,
the UK will encounter significant extra bureaucracy and uncertainty in
doing business with the EU.
This will lead to a gradual divergence between the UK and all its
European neighbours. That, in turn, will have cultural and political
effects. The UK, and the EU states including Ireland will, so to speak,
be mixing in different company. They will increasingly be seeing the
world from diverging angles of vision, and issues that were previously
depoliticised will become more political.
© CEPS - Centre for European Policy Studies
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