The UK is still not in a position to assume responsibility for
regulation in several critical policy areas including trade,
crime and the environment, a new academic report has found.
The report ‘UK
regulation after Brexit’ (attached) finds that the UK was
ill-prepared when responsibility for regulation switched from the
EU following the end of the transition period. The UK does not
have the physical or IT infrastructures in place to manage trade
in its new relationship with the EU and is relying on
transitional arrangements to make the system work.
UK regulators are still not ready to take on their new
responsibilities the report, by UK in a Changing Europe, the
Centre for Competition Policy, and Brexit & Environment,
finds.
In the environment, the UK left the EU’s European Environment
Agency but the UK Office for Environmental Protection has still
not opened, leaving the UK without a body to monitor government
action or scrutinise compliance with environmental law.
Many UK authorities are not adequately equipped compared to the
EU bodies they replaced. Staffing and budget are an issue, but UK
bodies lack powers in inspection and enforcement too. They have
also lost access to data crucial to the police and border
control. Europol databases had been consulted more than 500
million times a year by UK authorities, and the Metropolitan
Police made more than 100,000 requests for information from the
European Criminal Records Information System.
The report also raises important question marks about costs and
duplication.
In chemicals and aviation, UK regulators replicate the same
functions that are performed by EU bodies and in those
industries, which are both heavily regulated, it will be a tall
order for UK authorities to develop the same levels of expertise
as the EU bodies they replace.
UK businesses wanting to operate in both the UK and the EU will
have to submit to the same bureaucracy twice. In chemicals,
industry will have to cover the costs of testing and registration
a second time, estimated at a total of £1bn, when they only
recently paid for the creation of the EU system.
The report, also describes how the UK EU deal leaves significant
‘unfinished business’. There are grace periods for customs
formalities, issues where the UK and the EU still need to reach
agreement, and transitional arrangements where the terms of the
UK’s withdrawal from the EU are not yet decided and where the
full effects have yet to be felt.
A future review of energy is linked to how well the new
arrangements play out in fisheries, while the entire agreement
will be reviewed every five years.
The report concludes that the UK’s decision to leave the single
market and the customs union was driven by a determination to
gain regulatory autonomy at all costs. But, in practice, the UK
is unlikely to be able to diverge over the long term.
The UK is bound by the terms of the Trade and Cooperation
Agreement and highly dependent on trade with the EU and the UK is
constrained by wider international laws and conventions. The EU
is a global standard setter in many areas, so if the UK were to
diverge from these standards it is likely to disadvantage
businesses in the country.
Professor Hussein Kassim, Senior Fellow of UK in a Changing
Europe, said: “The report shows that the challenges facing the UK
following the end of the transition are not merely teething
problems.
“The UK has assumed huge regulatory responsibilities, but it is
not clear that UK regulators are sufficiently powerful, have the
right resources or can develop the necessary expertise to perform
effectively even in the medium-term. Although the UK has gained
regulatory autonomy in theory, it faces formidable constraints to
diverge in practice.”
ENDS
Notes to editors
- This report was written by: Tola Amodu, Catherine Barnard,
David Bailey, Pierre Bocquillon, Wanyu Chang, Meredith Crowley,
Cleo Davies, Mark Dayan, Mary Dobbs, Sean Ennis, Nicholas Fahy,
Andrew Fearne, Amelia Fletcher, Sarah Hall, Michael Harker,
Martin Heneghan, Tamara HerveyChristopher Huggins, Scott James,
Sabine Jacques, Andrew Jordan, Hussein Kassim, Karen Mc Cullagh,
Brendan Moore, Antonia Navas, Steve Peers, Ludivine Petetin,
Albert Sanchez Graells, Andreas Stephan, Matthew Wood, and
Kathryn Wright.
- The report was edited by UEA Professor Hussein Kassim, and
Senior Fellow UK in a Changing Europe, UEA Professor and Director
of the Centre for Competition Policy Sean Ennis, and UEA
Professor of Environmental Sciences and co-leader of ‘Brexit
& Environment’, Andrew Jordan.
- The UK in a Changing Europe promotes rigorous, high-quality
and independent research into the complex and ever changing
relationship between the UK and the EU. It is funded by the
Economic and Social Research Council and is based at King's
College London