The Treasury Committee has today published a unanimously-agreed
Report on the Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaration. The
purpose of the report is not to make a recommendation on how MPs
should vote on the Withdrawal Agreement, but to provide MPs with
as much information as possible. The key conclusions of the
report are:
-
White Paper scenario in Government analysis cannot be
used to inform meaningful vote
-
Parliament could draw from range of scenarios in
Government analysis
-
Committee “disappointed” that Government has produced
no short-term analysis of its deal
-
Government should have modelled the Backstop
-
Bank of England confident that financial services
sector can withstand No Deal Brexit
Report Summary
- The
Government provided economic analysis of the UK leaving the EU
under five different scenarios. The White Paper scenario, which
is akin to the Chequers proposal, represents the most optimistic
and generous reading of the Political Declaration, insofar as it
is consistent with it at all. It does not represent the central
or most likely outcome under the Political Declaration.
Therefore, it cannot be used to inform Parliament’s
meaningful vote on the Withdrawal Agreement. Parliament
may wish to draw from the range of scenarios in the Government
analysis in order to assess the economic impact of the Withdrawal
Agreement.
- As requested over the summer, the Chancellor agreed to
provide the Committee with economic analyses of the choices
facing Parliament, ahead of the meaningful vote on the final
deal. Yet the information provided includes no analysis of the
Backstop, and there is no short-term analysis of any of the
scenarios, including on public finances and on regional and
sectoral job losses and gains. The Government has only provided
long-term analysis, which does not show how the economy will
transition to a new trading relationship, or the path taken by
inflation and unemployment. Although the Bank provided the
Committee with short-term analysis, the Committee
is disappointed that the Treasury did not provide
all the evidence that the Committee requested as
there is no Government short-term analysis of the deal upon which
Parliament will vote.
- As an example of a scenario omitted from the Government’s
analysis, the Committee observed that the Backstop position,
agreed to in the Withdrawal Statement, was not included. The
Backstop establishes a single UK-EU customs territory if a future
agreement to supersede the Protocol cannot be completed by
December 2020 and the Government has not extended the
implementation period. The Governor of the Bank of England told
the Committee that “on average for a trade deal from start to
finish, it is something in the order of four years.” Trade
negotiations can take four years to agree, and previous EU
negotiations, have taken longer; the EU-Canada Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) took over eight years. It is
feasible, therefore, that the UK could enter the Backstop.
Despite it being neither the UK’s nor the EU’s preferred
position, the Government should have modelled the
Backstop.
- In each of the modelled scenarios, the financial
services sector will contribute less Gross Value
Added to the UK economy. Under the White Paper scenario, the UK’s
financial services sector would lose its ability to sell services
via the European Economic Area’s financial services passporting
arrangements, and the Government would seek to extend the
existing equivalence framework. During an implementation period,
the UK would have no vote in the European Supervisory
Authorities, but would have to implement its actions; the UK
could be considered a ‘rule taker’. The Financial Conduct
Authority expressed concern about being a ‘rule taker’ with no
influence. Assessing the financial service sector’s ability to
withstand a No Deal scenario, the Governor provided reassurance
that the Bank of England “are already sleeping soundly at night,
because the core of the financial sector is in the position that
it needs to be in for the tough scenario.”
Commenting on the Report, Rt Hon. MP, Chair of the Treasury
Committee, said:
“Despite differing views on Brexit between members of the
Treasury Committee, our report on the economic analysis of the
Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaration has been agreed
unanimously.
“The aim of this report is not to recommend how MPs should
vote, but to ensure that MPs are as informed as possible when it
comes to choosing a division lobby.
“Yet the Government has made this difficult to achieve. The
Committee is disappointed that the Government has modelled its
White Paper, which represents the most optimistic reading of the
Political Declaration, rather than a more realistic
scenario.
“The Committee is also disappointed that the Treasury has not
analysed the backstop and fails to include short-term analysis of
any of the scenarios, including impacts on public finances and on
regional and sectoral job losses or gains.
“Despite this, the Committee hopes that all MPs will read our
report to draw from the range of scenarios modelled in order to
assess the economic impact of the Withdrawal Agreement and
Political Declaration.”