Approaching the Brexit end game
Join our weekly 30-minute “COVID-19” webinar this Thursday at 13:00 BST. We’ll cover the latest health and economic impacts and our guests, Siobhan Godley, Hugo Clark and Simon Bedford, will discuss the impact of COVID-19 on the real estate sector and city centres. To register for this week’s webinar, on 25 June, please visit: https://event.on24.com/wcc/r/2395449/E03DC9CB0B3D9F133A25EA0537B4F95C
- Visit our “COVID-19 Economics Monitor”, which is available here: https://www2.deloitte.com/uk/en/pages/finance/articles/covid-19-economics-monitor.html
- The monitor is updated weekly and features a changing set of charts and tables illustrating key economic themes from the COVID-19 crisis and our forecasts for UK GDP growth over this year and the next. We also share links to important data sources and recent articles that we have found interesting and informative.
- COVID-19 has monopolised the business headlines for the last three months. But now, with the negotiations stepping up a gear and the transition set to end by December, Brexit is moving back into the limelight.
- The UK left the legal structures of the EU on 31 January, entering a transition period which lasts until the end of this year under which most arrangements, including on trade, continue as before. The negotiations now taking place will determine the future relationship between the UK and the EU.
- The UK is seeking tariff and quota-free access for its goods and would like the free trade agreement to match the best around in services. In particular, the UK wants financial services to operate under ‘equivalence’, allowing many UK financial products to be sold into the EU.
- In return the EU wants the UK to accept the so-called level playing field – the EU rules on state aid, competition policy, the environment, support for industry and employment. Retaining access to UK fishing waters is another EU priority. Fishing is a small industry, but one that has intense emotional resonance for maritime nations.
- The EU insists that the UK cannot enjoy full access to EU markets without accepting the rules and the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in interpreting them. This tension between trade access and rules plays out in many trade negotiations, for instance over the UK’s scepticism towards US exports of chicken cleaned in chlorinated water or, more generally, over state subsidies.
- The UK appears deeply reluctant to be a rule taker in its dealings with the EU. The UK’s chief negotiator, David Frost, has said that the UK is leaving the EU precisely in order to break free from EU rules.
- This pull between, on the one hand, the UK’s desire for a free trade agreement and, on the other, the EU’s insistence on a level playing field, lies at the heart of the impasse between the two sides.
- The UK and the EU have now both ruled out extending negotiations by the deadline of the end of this month. Achieving a later extension is legally cumbersome and seems, for now, unlikely. The EU says that a deal must be reached by 31 October, though this seems ambitious. While the EU has a history of taking negotiations to the line, the need for 27 member states to ratify a deal suggests a deal will need to be struck by mid-November at the latest.
- Without a new trade agreement the UK would default to World Trade Organization (WTO) rules. Northern Ireland would remain aligned to EU rules on industrial goods and agriculture to prevent a hard border on the island of Ireland and regulatory checks would take place between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.
- This outcome was envisaged in the withdrawal agreement signed by both sides and the UK government is keen to stress this would not, strictly speaking, constitute a 'no-deal' Brexit. The withdrawal agreement does contain some minimal provisions explaining how trade would be handled on day one if there is no new agreement.
- Defaulting to WTO rules would be disruptive for both parties and would mean the most distant form of economic relationship between the UK and EU. Both sides have an interest in securing a deal and may, yet, make concessions. The EU’s fishing nations could, perhaps, drop their aim of maintaining existing fishing quotas while the UK might accept existing, but not future, employment and environmental legislation.
- But after four rounds of talks the gap between the two sides seems as wide as ever. Given that a deal would need to be struck within six months, a WTO outcome, or what has been called a ‘thin agreement’ are very real possibilities. A thin deal would likely be a zero-tariff, zero-quota deal with adjustments that might, for instance, ease non-tariff barriers for certain sectors or allow mutual recognition of some technical standards. But it would still be a significant step down from current trading arrangements.
- If the UK were to revert to operating on WTO terms it would be bound by the ‘Most Favoured Nation’ (MFN) principle. Under this both the UK and the EU cannot offer any trading advantage to the other that they are not willing to offer to any other country. The only exception to MFN rules is where countries have a free trade agreement.
- Under a WTO outcome tariffs would be levied on UK exports to the EU at an average of 4.3%, with some goods, particularly on agricultural goods and cars, subject to much higher rates. The EU does not levy tariffs on services, but non-tariff barriers, such as the loss of mutual recognition of professional qualifications, would weigh on trade.
- The UK has proposed an import tariff schedule which would take effect next year and would apply to all countries with which the UK does not have a trade agreement. In the absence of a trade deal the schedule would cover EU imports. 87% of UK imports by value would be tariff-free, up from about 80% today. UK consumers would find the price of some EU imports rising and those of some non-EU imports falling.
- Trying to estimate the economic effects of different varieties of Brexit has been a speculative business at the best of times. But with the pandemic likely to generate huge swings in activity, disentangling the impact of Brexit from other factors will be almost impossible. In a normal quarter the UK economy might be expected to grow by around 0.4%. We expect quarterly growth to run at around ten times this rate in the second half of this year and the first half of next as activity recovers from the lockdown slump. Were a full lockdown to be reinstated the profile of growth would be more erratic still.
- There are arguments for ‘getting on’ with Brexit. Some believe the disruption from Brexit is best coped with at the same time as business adjusts to the post-COVID world. Reduced levels of trade, travel, migration and tourism in the wake of the pandemic would reduce the economic impact of Brexit, simply because there is less activity to disrupt. The huge amount of policy stimulus coming from central banks and governments will, the argument runs, help the UK economy through the Brexit transition.
- Yet the two shocks, from the pandemic and Brexit, could amplify one another. The pandemic has stretched many businesses. Coping with social distancing, uncertainty, sub-par demand and then Brexit could be too much for some. Moreover, the sectors disrupted by a post-Brexit trading regime will not necessarily overlap with those affected by the pandemic. Those which have fared relatively well up until now such as the pharmaceutical and financial services sectors, could be caught in the turbulence.
- The moment of truth on Brexit is approaching. With concessions and will, a trade agreement could yet be struck. But from where we stand today, an exit on WTO terms looks a very real possibility.
OUR REVIEW OF LAST WEEK’S NEWS
The UK FTSE 100 equity index ended the week up 3.1% at 6,293. Markets were buoyed by better than expected UK jobs data.
COVID-19
- The seven-day moving average for daily new COVID-19 cases in the UK stood at 1,248 on 20 June, down from 1,358 on 13 June and a peak of 5,519 on 14 April
- The spread of COVID-19 appears to be accelerating in 23 of 50 US states with significant increases in confirmed cases seen in California, Arizona, Texas and Florida
- An additional 175,000 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Brazil over the last week. Chile, Peru and Colombia also saw high numbers of new cases
- The US, Brazil, India, Russia and Mexico currently account for around 56% of new confirmed cases
- Scientists at Oxford University revealed that a widely available steroid, Dexamethasone, can significantly reduce deaths from COVID-19
- The Financial Times reported that the UK government will announce a reduction in social distancing from two to a ‘one-metre plus’ rule. International social distancing rules vary between one metre, including in France and Denmark and as recommended by the World Health Organization, and two, as in Spain and Canada
Economic developments
- UK public debt reached almost £2tn, exceeding 100% of GDP for the first time since the early 1960s
- UK job vacancies fell by 42% in the quarter to May
- US retail sales rebounded, growing 17.7% in May but remain 6.1% below levels seen in the same month last year
- UK retail sales increased by 12% between April and May but were 13.1% below levels seen in the same month last year
- Chinese retail sales in May recovered to 97.2% of levels seen in the same month last year
- UK consumer confidence picked up in May but remained well below long-term averages
- Inflation remained muted in the euro area, with prices rising just 0.1% in the year to May
- UK inflation slowed with prices rising 0.5% in the year to May
- Industrial production saw a modest increase in the US in May following sharp declines in April
- The International Energy Agency forecasts growth in oil demand next year but expects demand in 2021 to remain below 2019 levels
- Leading US economist Jeffrey Sachs said that the deepening cold war between the US and China is a bigger worry for the world than coronavirus
Policy response
- Policymakers at the Bank of England voted to keep rates on hold at 0.1% noting it now expects a less severe contraction in Q2 than first feared
- The Bank will increase its purchases of UK government bonds by £100bn over the remainder of the year, a lower amount than some had predicted
- The Financial Times reported that the UK chancellor is contemplating cutting VAT to boost growth
- The BBC reported that the UK government will introduce new measures on Monday to protect businesses critical to public health from foreign takeovers
- The US Federal Reserve began purchasing individual corporate bonds last week, more than two months after it first announced the policy
- Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell cautioned Congress against reducing levels of fiscal stimulus saying “support would be well-placed at this time”
Business news
- The English Premier League resumed its matches behind closed doors
- Facebook launched a mobile payments service utilising WhatsApp in Brazil
- Andrew Tyrie stepped down as head of the UK Competition and Markets Authority citing the “inherent limits” of the position
- Online retailer Boohoo is to buy the online operations of Oasis and Warehouse, both currently in administration
- The EU has opened a competition probe into the planned merger of carmakers Fiat Chrysler and PSA over concerns it may reduce competition in the small commercial vans market
- The Wall Street Journal reported that US companies repatriated $124bn in foreign profits in Q1 2020, the highest since a tax-induced surge in 2017, as companies sought to bolster balance sheets
Politics
- India and China clashed on their disputed border resulting in the deaths of at least 20 Indian troops and an unknown number of Chinese troops
- The US withdrew from talks with Europe on the global taxation of large tech companies and threatened tariffs if new taxes were imposed
- UK prime minister Boris Johnson and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen agreed to intensify talks on the future EU-UK relationship following four previous rounds of talks remaining deadlocked
- A meeting of EU leaders failed to make a breakthrough on the details of their proposed budget and pandemic recovery package
And finally… last week saw the release of “You Should Have Left”, a psychological thriller starring Kevin Bacon and Amanda Seyfried about a family who are unable to escape a haunted Welsh vacation residence. It was released on digital streaming platforms given the global closure of cinemas and lockdown restrictions… too close to home