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31 January 2022

UK in a Changing EuropeDOING THINGS DIFFERENTLY? POLICY AFTER BREXIT


Brexit is done, but what does it mean? Taking back control was supposed to provide an opportunity to rewrite rules for the British economy.


Joël Reland,Anand Menon and Jill Rutter

 Yet as the resignation of Lord Frost in December 2021 — ostensibly over concerns about the
‘current direction of travel’ and lack of movement to ‘a lightly regulated, low-tax

entrepreneurial economy’— shows, it has, to date, been too slow for some.

In what follows, a number of authors underline that important choices are in

fact already being made. Immigration and trade policy have undergone profound

transformation, and a new subsidy regime is imminent. In other areas, significant

plans for divergence are in place, but these are complex and will often take years

to develop fully. Their full implications will also take time to become clear.

This report brings together a number experts in their respective fields to

investigate how policy and policymaking have changed in a range of sectors. We

asked them to consider how changes so far compare to what was promised before

Brexit, and to analyse what changes lie ahead and what their impact might be.

Their contributions are divided into three sections: first, those policy areas (trade,

immigration, agriculture, fisheries and subsidies) where Brexit compelled the UK

to put in place alternative policies. Second, those retaining significant amounts of

EU law where the government could think seriously about divergence (financial

services, procurement, taxation, consumer protection, environmental policy,

energy policy and aviation). A final section considers new or emergent sectors

in which both the UK and EU are looking to dip their regulatory toes (climate

change and net zero, data and digital, autonomous vehicles and bioscience).

Overall, there has been no ‘big bang’ of immediate and major divergence from EU

rules. Immigration, of course, is the big exception. Free movement has ended. The

UK’s new ‘points-based immigration system’ is considerably more liberal for non-

EU migrants than before — and the changing composition of inward migration

reflects that. That being said, sectors particularly dependent on EU workers

now report some of the highest levels of staff vacancies and evidence suggests

that the more liberal non-EU regime will not offset the economic cost of ending

free movement. It does, however, seem to have reduced the salience of migration

among voters.

As for trade, the TCA created new bureaucracy for businesses and is estimated to

have reduced UK exports to the EU by 14%, and imports by 24%. While the UK

proved relatively successful in ‘rolling over’ the third-party agreements it enjoyed

as an EU member, new trade deals are taking longer to land, and will far from
offset the losses from reduced EU trade. Although British fishers benefit from a

slightly increased quota agreed in the negotiations, seafood exporters have faced

extra paperwork and costs under the new trading regime.

England’s new regime for agricultural subsidies marks a notable departure from

the Common Agriculture Policy, rewarding farmers financially for ‘public goods’

— meeting biodiversity and net zero targets — rather than rewarding higher food

production. The transition will be challenging for some farmers, and it will be

interesting to see how the scheme evolves in practice and whether it offers the

environmental dividend promised...

more at UK and EU

Joël Reland,Anand Menon and Jill Rutter




© UK in a Changing Europe


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