The government talks of teething troubles, but the red tape is here to stay
TWO MONTHS after Britain left the single
market and customs union in favour of a trade and co-operation agreement
(TCA), complaints are multiplying, from seafood sellers and pork
exporters to fashionistas and musicians. Some of these are teething
problems, but most are the consequence of Boris Johnson’s decision to
prioritise sovereignty over market access.
The
biggest political problem is the Northern Ireland protocol, under which
the province stays in the single market for goods and the customs
union. The government chose this route as an alternative to a hard
border on the island of Ireland. But now that border checks have begun,
disrupting trade, the Democratic Unionist Party and some Tories are
demanding that Mr Johnson should scrap the protocol entirely. He will
not do that, but the protocol will be an issue in the elections next
year to the Northern Ireland Assembly.
Trade across the channel is suffering even
more. The British Chambers of Commerce report that almost half of
exporters to the EU have met obstacles. Although the TCA promises zero
tariffs and quotas, that is subject to rules-of-origin requirements to
ensure that exported goods are not first imported from outside the EU.
Rules of origin have hit businesses from supermarkets to pet foods to
fashion designers. Strict sanitary rules are similarly obstructing
exports of shellfish and many agrifoods. Daniel Kelemen, a politics
professor at Rutgers University who is collating examples of Brexit
trade barriers on Twitter, had by this week recorded nearly 200 cases.
Services
are no better, mainly because the TCA omits them. The City of London’s
hopes of retaining business across Europe through a grant of regulatory
equivalence have evaporated. Instead, the EU crows about Amsterdam
unseating London as the continent’s largest share market. Musicians,
actors, fashion designers and professional-service firms are griping
about expensive red tape and travel restrictions. A provisional decision
to accept the adequacy of Britain’s data-protection standards is a rare
ray of hope, and even this may be challenged in court.
The
chances of reducing these barriers are small. Mujtaba Rahman of the
Eurasia Group consultancy says there could be improvements at the
margin, but anything substantial (such as Britain aligning with EU
sanitary standards) would require Mr Johnson to cross his sovereignty
red lines. The promotion of Lord Frost, the hardline negotiator of the
TCA, to replace Michael Gove as minister in charge of EU relations, does
not augur compromise. Nor does the row over the EU’s ambassador in
London, to whom the Johnson government (alone in the world) refuses full
diplomatic status. Vaccine wars, even if only rhetorical, do not help.....
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