, Labour’s Shadow International Trade
Secretary, responding to the new Institute of Directors
survey on the impact of Brexit on UK business reported in the
Financial Times, said:
“This survey exposes the fundamental problem with the
government’s current trade strategy. They say we can ignore the
losses facing British firms doing business in Europe because new
trade deals with the rest of the world are filling the void, but
that is clearly nonsense.
“Last week, they launched negotiations to join the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, which as things stand, according to their own
figures, will add just £400 million - or 0.017 per cent - to GDP,
over a 15-year period. That is a tiny fraction of the trade being
lost with Europe as a result of the red tape, customs checks,
shipping costs and labour shortages highlighted by this
survey.
“But instead of trying to work with British business and our
European counterparts to fix those problems, the government is
ignoring them, and saying that is not their current priority when
it comes to trade. It is a head-in-the-sand strategy, for which
British businesses and workers are paying the price.”
Ends
Notes for Editors:
- The Institute of Directors survey of 651 companies who trade
with the EU is reported in today's Financial Times, stating that
a third of them have reported a decline or loss of business since
the new rules governing UK-EU trade came into effect on January
1st. https://www.ft.com/content/eadc7c23-2125-4381-93ae-a54104e5ccc7
- Page 60 of the Department for International Trade’s scoping
paper on CPTPP accession spells out the forecast 0.08% long-term
increase in GDP (£1.8bn) that will result from UK accession. Page
65 of the document outlines an alternative scenario if Malaysia
maintains its current refusal to ratify the agreement, which
adjusts the increase in GDP down to £400mn (or 0.017% in
percentage terms).