Think tank IPPR says there is a ‘deal to be done’ with scope for
compromise on key aspects of the level playing field
Following the publication of the UK
government’s EU trade deal negotiating position, the progressive
think tank IPPR calls on both sides to forge a compromise rather
than risk a no-deal scenario.
The think tank has analysed the positions
of both the UK and EU on the contentious ‘level playing field’
and has published a briefing setting out
the scope for agreement (see table in notes). The analysis
revealed that whilst there was a good chance of agreement on
taxation, labour and environmental standards, the two sides are
at ‘loggerheads’ on state aid and competition
policy.
However, IPPR research has found
there is little to be gained from the UK diverging from the EU on
state aid rules, as current EU rules do not prevent an active
industrial policy.
Marley Morris, IPPR Associate
Director for Immigration, Trade and EU Relations, said:
“The UK and the EU are at loggerheads as
the negotiations begin. But it would be self-defeating for the
government to walk away from the table in June if talks haven’t
progressed.
“In reality, there is a sensible deal to be
done. In the most contested area of the negotiations – the ‘level
playing field’ – the EU is for the most part not looking for the
UK to follow EU rules. Instead, the EU simply wants reassurances
that the UK’s labour and environmental protections will not fall
too far below the EU’s over time.
“In fact, the UK public agrees: our polling
from 2018 found widespread public support among both remainers
and leavers for maintaining EU labour and environmental
standards, including those on working hours, temporary agency
workers’ rights, and renewable energy
targets.
“It is mainly in the area of state aid
where the EU is looking for the UK to follow EU rules. This is
likely to be the hardest area of negotiations. But as IPPR has
previously argued, state aid rules do not prevent the UK from
nationalising companies, from investing in research and
innovation, or from tackling regional inequalities. There is
little to be gained from ditching EU state aid
rules.
“The deal being offered by the EU therefore
offers zero tariffs on goods without restricting the UK’s
sovereignty in the vast majority of areas. It is clearly in the
UK’s interests to secure a deal this
year.”
ENDS
NOTES TO EDITORS
-
The IPPR Level Playing Field Briefing
is available to read here: https://www.ippr.org/blog/level-playing-field-ippr-briefing
-
The 2019 research paper State
Aid Rules and Brexit is available to download
here: https://www.ippr.org/research/publications/state-aid-rules-and-brexit
-
IPPR public attitudes polling on
Brexit, trade deals and state aid from 2018 is available to
download here: https://www.ippr.org/research/publications/have-your-cake-or-eat-it
-
More information about Marley Morris is
available here: https://www.ippr.org/about/people/staff/marley-morris
-
Table outlining the scope for
compromise across aspects of the level playing
field:
-
Full length publications on the level
playing field and points-based immigration system will be
published in the next month.