No such thing as
'frictionless' trade, Barnier warns Britain
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[July 06, 2017]
By Alastair Macdonald
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union's
chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier warned British ministers and
businesses who are calling for "frictionless trade" with the EU after
Britain leaves that that is "not possible".
Addressing an EU business forum in Brussels on Thursday, Barnier said
London's "red lines" for a future trade relationship meant Britain was
definitely leaving the single market and the customs union, and only
membership of both allowed "frictionless" trading arrangements.
But Britain will stick by its aim to get a comprehensive free trade deal
and customs agreement with the EU to ensure that trade is "as
frictionless as possible" once it has left the bloc, a spokesman for
Prime Minister Theresa May said.
Barnier said he was unsure the EU's refusal to grant single market
access piecemeal and insistence on control of standards in the single
market "have been fully understood across the Channel".
"I have heard some people in the UK argue that one can leave the single
market and keep all of its benefits - that is not possible," he said. "I
have heard some people in the UK argue that one can leave the single
market and build a customs union to achieve 'frictionless trade' – that
is not possible."
Stressing that time was tight for a deal by the time Britain
automatically leaves the bloc on March 30, 2019 - "time flies", he said.
Barnier said he was ready to handle a failure of talks and "no deal" but
that would be damaging, especially to Britain, and he saw "no reasonable
justification" for it.
"A fair deal is far better than no deal," he said, turning around a
phrase popularized by May that no deal is better than a bad deal.
He called for rapid agreement on priority issues in talks begun last
month to build a "climate of trust" so that trade negotiations could
begin as soon as possible. But in urging businesses to prepare for
Brexit now, he stressed that whatever deal was done would carry
"significant consequences".
"A trading relationship with a country that does not belong to the
European Union obviously involves friction," Barnier said. He cited
disruption to cross-border traders processing value-added tax (VAT) and
a need for all EU imports of animals and animal products to be tested at
borders.
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European Union Chief
Negotiator for Brexit Michel Barnier looks on during a news
conference after a European General Affairs Ministers meeting in
Brussels, Belgium May 22, 2017. REUTERS/Eric Vidal/File Photo
Those issues are of particular concern in Ireland, where farming businesses on
either side of the new UK-EU border on the island fear disruption. Barnier
repeated EU willingness to make a priority of agreeing border issues on Ireland,
where leaders on all sides fear a "hard" frontier could also undermine the
fragile peace in the British province of Northern Ireland.
The EU's conclusion of a free trade deal with Japan on Thursday was hailed by EU
leaders as a sign of what the combined economic power of the bloc can achieve -
and of what Britain will miss when it leaves.
"In the context of the discussion about Brexit, we have heard statements
claiming that it isn't worth being in the European Union, as it is easier to do
global trade outside of the EU," European Council President Donald Tusk said.
"Today we have shown that this is not true," he said.
EU Agriculture Commissioner Phil Hogan said the deal which will open Japan to
European high-value food and drink exports, "shows the importance of size in
global trade negotiations".
"No individual member state could ever hope to achieve what the EU can achieve
together," Hogan said.
The EU hopes it will take effect in early 2019, just when Britain is leaving.
London, where Trade Secretary Liam Fox welcomed the EU-Japan deal, may seek to
emulate its benefits for the likes of Britain's hugely valuable Scotch whisky
exports.
(Additional reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Robert-Jan Bartunek and
Louise Ireland)
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