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						UK rules out being in a customs union with the EU after 
						Brexit
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		 [February 05, 2018] 
		 By Andrew MacAskill and William James 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Britain has ruled out 
		staying in any customs union with the European Union after Brexit, Prime 
		Minister Theresa May's spokesman said on Monday as the government 
		prepares for a crunch week of Brexit talks.
 
 The extent of any British post-Brexit involvement in the EU's customs 
		union - which binds members into a trade bloc with common external 
		tariffs - has become a major issue of contention inside May's divided 
		government and Conservative Party.
 
 Membership of the, or a, customs union after Brexit, would prevent 
		London from striking trade deals with countries outside the EU in 
		future.
 
 "The key point, as the prime minister has said on many many occasions, 
		is that we need to have our own independent trade policy and be able to 
		strike trade deals with the rest of the world," May's spokesman told 
		reporters.
 
 "We will be leaving the EU and the customs union and it is not 
		government policy to be members of 'the' customs union or 'a' customs 
		union."
 
		
		 
		He said the official negotiating stance had been set out in a document 
		published in August giving: "two possible options and they are: a highly 
		streamlined customs arrangement, and a new customs partnership with the 
		EU."
 The spokesman said Britain was still looking at both options, and no 
		deadline for a decision on which one to pursue had been set.
 
 With just a year left before Britain's March 2019 exit from the European 
		Union, May's party remains deeply divided over what sort of relationship 
		should be built between the world's biggest trading bloc and the world's 
		sixth-largest economy.
 
 Such are the divisions within May's government, that the debate over the 
		extent of Britain's post-Brexit participation in a EU customs union has 
		taken place in public with key ministers offering a range of views.
 
 BREXIT TARIFFS?
 
 While May has repeatedly said that Britain will leave the customs union, 
		some ministers had hoped that Britain could remain in some sort of 
		bespoke customs arrangement with the EU after Brexit.
 
 But supporters of Brexit say one of the main benefits of leaving the 
		bloc will be the ability to strike trade deals with other, 
		faster-growing countries around the world.
 
 The Confederation of British Industry has called for Britain to stay in 
		a customs union and finance minister Philip Hammond last month also left 
		open the possibility of Britain joining a new customs union.
 
		
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			Anti-Brexit demonstrators wave EU and Union flags outside the Houses 
			of Parliament in London, Britain, January 30, 2018. REUTERS/Toby 
			Melville 
            
			 
A customs union means that its members apply the same tariff to goods imported 
into their territory from elsewhere and apply no tariffs to goods from other 
members. It also limits checks and other bureaucracies at borders between 
members.
 Unless Britain negotiates a new trade deal with the EU, its exports would run 
into the union's external tariffs, which average about 5 percent across all 
goods, including 10 percent for cars and over 200 percent on certain types of 
poultry.
 
 But May is under pressure from eurosceptic members in her party to quit the 
trading arrangement because for them the key prize is chance to sign new trade 
deals with other nations such as the U.S., China and India.
 
 Britain and the EU are due to hold their first formal discussions about what 
their future relationship will look like after Britain leaves the EU this week.
 
EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier will meet his opposite number, Brexit 
Secretary David Davis, in London on Monday for the first time since EU leaders 
told Barnier to negotiate a post-Brexit transition period to ease Britain's 
departure.
 May will hold two cabinet meetings on Wednesday and Thursday at which she will 
try to heal the deep divisions among her ministers over the best way to leave 
the EU.
 
 If no deal is reached by October of this year, many businesses fear Britain 
could face a disorderly exit that would weaken the West, disrupt the peace in 
Northern Ireland, imperil Britain’s $2.7 trillion economy and undermine London’s 
position as the only financial center to rival New York.
 
 
A disorderly Brexit as a result of Britain misjudging the "self-preservation" 
instincts of the European Union could lead to a further downgrade of the UK's 
sovereign credit rating, S&P Global also said on Monday.
 (Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and William Schomberg; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
 
				 
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