The Progressive Post

Analysing UK-EU trade relations in the context of Brexit

05/02/2018

There has been an idea doing the rounds in the UK (which is now on its last legs) that German industry will ensure, via Chancellor Angela Merkel’s clout in EU decision making, favourable Brexit conditions for the UK. But this argument doesn’t hold water partly because it is not unclear what these conditions would entail and partly because German industry is really not pre-occupied with the fate of the UK.

 

In November last year the Cologne Institute for Economic Research, a German economic think tank with close links to business and industry associations, surveyed around 2,900 small, medium and large companies in Germany about the expected impact of the upcoming Brexit on German exports, investment, employment, human resources planning and production processes. The results: more than 90 per cent of the companies asked do not foresee any serious impact from Brexit on these business activities.

Concerns obviously vary depending on a company’s exposure to trade with the UK. Thus, the plight of some larger German companies with complex networks of production and supply links with the UK has received some attention. But the bulk of German industry, in particular SMEs, are rather relaxed about Brexit. Some even expect benefits for their own business activities due to diversionary effects, i.e. being able to pick up some business by replacing British suppliers.

British industry is more dependent on supplies from Germany and Europe than the other way round.

Consequences of a ‘No deal’ Brexit scenario

Now 30th March 2019 is a key date. It is the date by when the UK is scheduled to leave the European Union. If there is no agreement by then, the UK will become a “third country” and will fall out of the customs’ union and the internal market. The effect of the “third country” label is that trade between the two economic areas will have to follow WTO rules, i.e. the re-introduction of tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers. This is going to hit some sectors more than others.

The Cologne Institute also did some research on what this means for Germany and found that the value regarding German inputs sourced from Britain is the highest for other transport equipment (a reference to transport for the production of ships, rail vehicles and, in particular, air and spacecraft equipment (such as Airbus)), followed by coke and refined petroleum products and the basic metal industry. From the UK’s perspective, the industries most affected, i.e. where the UK is importing most from Germany, are automobile and chemicals. Overall however, British industry’s intermediate input links with Germany are much higher than vice versa. Ten British industries export over 50 per cent of their intermediate input exports to other EU member states. To put it bluntly: British industry is more dependent on supplies from Germany and Europe than the other way round.

One also should note that the representatives and actors even in those hardest hit sectors nevertheless continued to support the EU’s positioning on Brexit.

Impact of Brexit in 2017

Interestingly, in March 2017, shortly after the UK triggered the Art. 50 process of leaving the EU, there was already a measurable decline of German exports to the UK mainly due to the devaluation of the British pound, which made British exports comparatively cheaper. The chemical sector (decline of exports by 20%) and the automotive industries (decline of 18%) were hit hardest. At the same time however, the German economy grew by 1.9%, indicating that German businesses found other markets for their goods and products. One also should note that the representatives and actors even in those hardest hit sectors nevertheless continued to support the EU’s positioning on Brexit.

But even though the claims on how German industry would come to the support of the UK are exaggerated, Brexit remains bad news for business on both sides of the channel. The loss of the second-largest European economy definitely hurts, both in terms of bilateral trade but also with regard to the EU as an institution. Thus, the belief in some special intervention by German industry and the German chancellor is built on sand, but the opposite, i.e. conspiracy theories about countries actively working against the UK in Brussels is equally ludicrous. EU heads of state and government have made it repeatedly clear that they deplore the UK’s decision to leave the Union and would prefer it to stay in the EU. As this unfortunately is not an option the UK itself wants to entertain, the position of the other EU members is quite clear – they are not going to sacrifice the EU for trade with Britain.

 

image: shutterstock.com

Find all related publications
Publications
19/04/2024

A New Global Deal

Reforming world governance
18/04/2024

The transformation of the mainstream right and its impact on (social) democracy

15/04/2024

Expected labour market effects of the Green Deal Industrial Plan

The potential of labour policy for Just Transition regions
15/04/2024

Labour migration in the Western Balkans

Balkan Focus series
Find all related news
News
29/04/2024

FEPS celebrates 20 years of the biggest EU enlargement

19/04/2024

FEPS welcomes the signing of the La Hulpe Declaration

05/04/2024

FEPS supports the declaration of Portimão calling for affordable housing in the EU

Affordable housing needs Europe, Europe needs affordable housing
05/04/2024

FEPS stands with Zita Gurmai against persecution from Orban regime

Find all related in the media
In the media

The Social Pillar at risk: Letta’s work and Schmit’s warnings for the next EU tenure

by The Watcher Post 03/05/2024
The Watcher Post's article focuses on the interventions by Nicolas Schmit, EU Commissioner and Enrico Letta, former Prime Minister of Italy, at FEPS event 'Call to Europe - The Future is Social'

Veinte años del ‘big bang europeo’, el espejo en el que se mira la próxima gran ampliación hacia el Este

by El País 02/05/2024
'Twenty years of the 'European big bang', the mirror in which the next big eastward enlargement is viewed' El País' article on EU enlargement features input from FEPS Secretary General László Andor, offering insights on the lessons to be learned from the 2004 enlargement

Hidak közel és távol

by Népszava 02/05/2024
'Bridges close and far' Article written by László Andor in the newspaper Népszava about Hungary's accession to the EU

State of the Union: End of the mandate, enlargement and revolution

by Euronews 29/04/2024
Secretary General Lászlo Andor discusses the 20th anniversary of the "big bang" enlargement of the EU with Euronews