IEA - Customs union membership will cost UK economic, trade and foreign policies

25 Apr 2019 10:02 AM

Remaining in a customs union with the EU would make it impossible for the UK to establish an independent trade policy, and render reclaiming policy areas such as agriculture and state aid an impossibility, an IEA briefing argues.

With customs union membership still on the table as a way to break the Brexit deadlock, a new IEA briefing outlines how any short-term benefits of customs union membership – such as securing supply chains – would be significantly outweighed in the long-run by the loss of trade opportunities and higher prices for UK consumers.

Author Shanker Singham, Director of the IEA’s trade unit, highlights how a customs union would come with significant risk to UK consumers, who would lack representation in new EU trade agreements; UK consumers could also face price rises that protect EU manufacturers, and find their interests ranked secondary to those of EU producers. It would also reduce the UK’s influence with historic partners across the developing world.

On top of these drawbacks, membership of a customs union does not achieve ‘frictionless’ trade – one of the supposed benefits championed by those in support of staying in a customs union.

Consequences of remaining in a customs union

Commenting on the report, author and Director of the IEA’s International Trade and Competition Unit, Shanker Singham said:

“A customs union with the EU would come with significant costs to the UK’s economic, trade and foreign policies.

“Any short-term benefits of securing supply chains and reducing disruption would be heavily outweighed by the loss of trade opportunities, asymmetric agreements, higher prices for consumers and the inability to defend UK producers from unfair trade practices and the loss of foreign policy influence.”

Notes to editors:

For media enquiries please contact Nerissa Chesterfield, Head of Communications: nchesterfield@iea.org.uk  07791 390 268 or Emma Revell, Communications Manager: erevell@iea.org.uk 07931 698 246

To download the IEA’s briefing “The consequences of a permanent customs union” please click here.

For more research from the IEA on the downsides of remaining in a customs union, please click here.

For more from the IEA in favour of a remaining in a customs union (EEA option) please click here.

The mission of the Institute of Economic Affairs is to improve understanding of the fundamental institutions of a free society by analysing and expounding the role of markets in solving economic and social problems and seeks to provide analysis in order to improve the public understanding of economics.

The IEA is a registered educational charity and independent of all political parties.