Steve Peers
The United Kingdom has its finger
in many pies: the EU, NATO, the United Nations Security Council and the
Commonwealth, to name just a few. Of these, the Commonwealth – which has just
finished its latest summit meeting – obviously has the closest specific link to
British culture and history, since it’s mainly comprised of our former
colonies. (A few Commonwealth members are not former colonies, and some obscure
ex-colonies like the USA chose not to join. For a full list of members, see here).
Like many British citizens, I
have friends and relatives in many Commonwealth countries: Canada, India, New
Zealand, Australia, Singapore and South Africa. But I also have friends in the
rest of the EU, as well as a professional interest in EU law. There’s no incompatibility between the two at a personal level: we can all enjoy poutine as well as paella, or watch Antonio
Banderas one day and Hugh Jackman the next. But is the same true of the UK's trade relationships?
When the UK joined the EU over
forty years ago, it sundered special trade links which it had with most of the
Commonwealth, and replaced them with trade links with the EU (as it’s called
now). One of the arguments sometimes invoked in favour of the UK leaving the EU
in the forthcoming referendum on membership is that the UK could reverse this
process, reviving its Commonwealth trade.
But a lot has changed in forty
years. In my view, what’s true for individuals is also true for the country as
a whole: the UK does not have to choose between trade with the Commonwealth and
trade with the EU, but can (and increasingly does) have both. This blog post explains
why. (I’ll write another post on the issue of the EU’s trade with
non-Commonwealth countries in future).
Background
Back in 1973, the UK had to end
special trade ties with the Commonwealth because the EU is a customs union,
which (according to the definition set out in international law) means that it has
common trade rules with the rest of the world. The EU has power to sign certain types of trade deals, instead of its Member States (although in practice those deals are usually subject to Member States' unanimous consent). But the EU’s powers don’t extend
to all types of ‘trade deals’, as that phrase is used by non-specialists. Those powers apply to the imposition of taxes at the border (known as tariffs) or other economic regulation of trade between
countries, but not to commercial
agreements with other countries to buy British goods. So, for instance, the UK
and India were free to conclude £9 billion worth of trade deals of that
broader type during the recent visit of the Indian Prime Minister.
It’s sometimes argued that trade
deals are irrelevant, because ‘governments don’t trade, businesses do’. While
it’s true to say that much trade takes place on the basis of contracts between
companies, governments still play a large role – either as purchasers of many goods
and services, or as regulators with the power to impose tariffs or regulation
which might reduce the volume of trade.
When the UK joined the EU, the EU
was mainly only interested in special trade deals with nearby countries (although this
included the Commonwealth countries of Cyprus and Malta). Mostly the EU then preferred to trade with third countries on the basis of multilateral rules instead. However, the EU did extend its existing
special trade agreement for former sub-Saharan African, Caribbean and Pacific
(ACP) colonies of France and Belgium to most of the former colonies of the UK
in those parts of the world. But it did not extend any special treatment to richer
Commonwealth countries, like Canada and Australia, or Commonwealth states in
Asia, like India or Malaysia.
But times have changed. In recent years, the EU has become more
interested in negotiating bilateral trade agreements with many countries, and
not relying so much on the multilateral trade system established by the World
Trade Organisation (WTO). This has transformed the EU’s trade relationship with
Commonwealth countries (along with many other states). Some of these treaties don't have the words 'free trade agreement' in their title, but the substance includes free trade rules; and indeed the agreements are notified as free trade agreements to the World Trade Organisation.
EU/Commonwealth trade today
The result of this change in
policy is that the EU has agreed free trade agreements (FTAs), or is in the
process of negotiating free trade agreements, with the vast majority of
Commonwealth states – a full 90% of the 50 Commonwealth countries that are not
in the EU. This includes the six Commonwealth states that accounted (in 2011) for 84% of Commonwealth trade – and many more besides.
More precisely, there are already
FTAs in force between the EU and 18 of those 50 Commonwealth states (36% of the
remaining Commonwealth). The EU has agreed FTAs with 14 of those countries (28%),
subject only to completing the ratification process. It is negotiating or about
to start negotiating FTAs with 13 states (26%). That leaves only 5 Commonwealth
states (10% of the non-EU total) that the EU is not planning FTA talks with. (For
full details of the status of EU trade relations with each of the countries
concerned, with links to further information, see the annex to this blog post).
Of course, the Commonwealth includes
many different types of economy, but the EU has agreed FTAs with two of the
wealthiest Commonwealth states (Canada and Singapore), and has recently
committed to talks with two more (Australia and New Zealand). It also has deals
or is negotiating with most of the larger developing Commonwealth members
(India, Nigeria, South Africa and Malaysia).
It’s sometimes suggested that the
EU’s trade deals with other countries don’t benefit the UK. But the UK’s exports
to Commonwealth countries have been increasing at over 10% a year – with increases
(over two years) of 33% to India, 31% to South Africa, 30% to Australia and 18%
to Canada. In fact, since 2004, British exports to India are up 143%. Needless
to say, this increase in trade with the Commonwealth (while an EU member) must
have created or maintained many British jobs.
Criticisms of the EU’s trade policy
The EU’s trade policy is often criticised
on three particular grounds. While there may be some force to these arguments,
the issue in the upcoming referendum is whether these problems would actually
be solved by the UK leaving the EU.
First of all, it’s often argued
that EU trade agreements are not fair for developing countries. In fact,
the EU’s negotiation of FTAs with developing Commonwealth countries in the last decade is
in part due to WTO rulings that the EU could not just sign one-way trade deals, liberalising only access to EU markets; such treaties have to liberalise trade on both sides (the EU had resisted
this). The EU does offer less generous unilateral trade preferences as an alternative to two-way deals (and some Commonwealth states, like Bangladesh, prefer this).
If the UK left the EU, it could
decide not to sign trade deals with
some of the developing Commonwealth countries that the EU has signed deals
with. It could also offer a more generous version of unilateral trade
preferences. However, the UK would not
be free to sign deals for one-way trade liberalisation, since it would be bound
by the same WTO rules on trade agreements that the EU breached when it signed
those deals. Moreover, while not replacing the EU’s trade deals would arguably
help the poorest countries’ economies, UK exports to those States would
logically be lower.
The second argument is that the
EU’s trade deals are a problem for the environment and public services,
and give industry overly generous intellectual property protection, with
the result (for instance) that prices of basic medicines rise due to extended patent
protection. But this argument is equally made against many trade deals that the
EU is not a party to at all – such as the recent Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement.
So, while (stepping outside the
Commonwealth for a moment) the planned EU/US trade agreement, known as TTIP, has
attracted critics concerned about its effect upon the UK’s health care (among
many other things), those issues would not magically go away if the UK, having
left the EU, sought to negotiate its own trade agreement with the USA instead. The
controversial parts of the draft deal are surely attractive to the US side as
well as the EU side; it’s not as if the EU is in a position to issue non-negotiable
demands to desperate, poverty-stricken Americans.
The third argument is that the EU
is not sufficiently interested in pursuing trade deals. As the facts discussed
above show, it’s quite false to suggest that the EU is not interested in trade deals
with Commonwealth countries, or that the UK's EU membership makes it impossible for British businesses to
increase their exports to those countries. But could it be argued that the UK alone
would do a better job of negotiating such trade deals, and negotiating them more
quickly, after Brexit?
It’s true that it often takes
years to negotiate EU trade agreements, and that some negotiations stall or
slow down to a snail’s pace (with India, for instance). But this is not unique
to the EU. Over twenty years ago, for instance, the Clinton administration developed
a plan for a ‘Free Trade Area of the Americas’ – but it has never come to full
fruition, and talks eventually fizzled out. There’s no guarantee that the UK
alone would be able to reach agreements more quickly than the EU as a whole.
In any event, as noted above, the
EU already has agreed trade deals with 64% of Commonwealth countries, and is
negotiating with another 26%. Some of the latter negotiations are likely to be
completed by the time that Brexit took place – since that would probably happen
two years after the referendum date, so likely in 2018 or 2019 (for more
discussion of the process of withdrawal from the EU, see here).
So the UK would have to ask perhaps
three-quarters of its Commonwealth partners for trade deals to replace those
already agreed with the EU. They might agree quickly to extend to the UK a parallel version of their
existing arrangement with the EU, since that would not really change the status
quo. But they might not be interested in negotiating any further trade liberalisation. If they are interested, they will ask
for concessions in return, and this will take time to negotiate.
For the remaining one-quarter or
so of states, the UK will have to start negotiations from scratch, in some
cases having to catch up with EU negotiations that are already underway. And
there is no guarantee that these other states will want to discuss FTAs, or that
negotiations would be successful.
Overall then, there’s no
certainty that UK exports to the Commonwealth would gain from Brexit. They
might even drop, if some Commonwealth countries aren’t interested in
replicating the EU’s trade agreements. Alternatively, they might increase – but
it’s hard to see how any gain in British exports would be enormous, given the
existence of so many FTAs between the EU and Commonwealth countries already,
and the uncertainty of those states’ willingness to renegotiate those deals.
Could this very hypothetical increase
in exports to the Commonwealth make up for any loss in UK exports to the EU
following Brexit? Obviously, this assessment depends on how Brexit would affect
UK/EU trade relations. That’s a hugely complex subject, which I will return to
another day, but suffice it to say that while I think a UK/EU trade deal after
Brexit is likely, it’s far from guaranteed. And it’s hugely unlikely that any such
trade deal would retain 100% of the UK’s access to the EU market. There are
many reasons to doubt this could happen, but first and foremost: why would the
EU send the signal that a Member State could leave the EU but retain all of its
trade access? If it did that, the EU would be signing its own death warrant.
The key fact to keep in mind here
is that the UK’s trade with the Commonwealth is less than one-quarter of its trade
with the EU. So to make up for even a 10% drop in exports to the EU, the UK
would have to increase exports to the Commonwealth by more than 40%. How likely is that, if the vast majority of trade between the EU and the Commonwealth would
already be covered by FTAs at that point?
Taken as a whole then, it’s clear
that the UK can remain a member of
the EU and trade with the
Commonwealth – and that this trade will only increase in future as more EU FTAs with
Commonwealth states come into force or are negotiated. Leaving the EU, on the
other hand, is liable to lead to reduction in trade with the remaining EU
without any plausible likelihood that trade with the Commonwealth would
increase by anything near the level necessary to compensate.
Annex
Canada: FTA agreed.
It must still undergo the formal ratification process.
Australia: FTA negotiations start soon
New Zealand: FTA negotiations start soon
South Africa: FTA in force
India: FTA under negotiation
Singapore: FTA agreed.
It must still undergo the formal ratification process.
Malaysia: FTA under negotiation
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Maldives: No plans for FTA
12 Caribbean Commonwealth states: FTA in force between EU
and 15 countries including Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize,
Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint
Lucia, Saint Kitts and Nevis and Trinidad and Tobago
Brunei: No plans for FTA
2 Pacific Commonwealth states: FTA in force with Papua New
Guinea and Fiji
7 more Pacific Commonwealth states: FTA under negotiation between
EU and 12 more countries including Kiribati, Nauru, Samoa, the Solomon Islands,
Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu
3 West African Commonwealth states: FTA agreed with 16 West
African countries including Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone. It must still undergo the formal
ratification process. (Note that Gambia left the Commonwealth in 2013; but it
is also part of this agreement).
Cameroon: FTA in force
4 East African Commonwealth states: FTA agreed with 5 East African
countries including Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda. It must still undergo the formal ratification process. (Update: the Commission proposed the signature and provisional application of this deal in February 2016)
2 Southern and Eastern African Commonwealth states: FTA in force
with 4 Southern and Eastern African countries including Mauritius and
Seychelles (and also Zimbabwe, a former Commonwealth country).
2 other Southern and Eastern African Commonwealth states: FTA under
negotiation with 7 more Southern and Eastern African countries including Malawi
and Zambia.
5 Southern African Commonwealth states: FTA agreed with Botswana,
Lesotho, Namibia, Swaziland and Mozambique.
It must still undergo the formal ratification process. (Update: the Council decided on the signature and provisional application of this deal in June 2016; it will be signed and enter into force provisionally in mid-June).
Photo credit: www.google.com
Thank you for this article, even though I read it quite late, it gains interest in the present. I was wondering, since I work in the Publishing business, how the industry would get affected with Brexit. This gave me some perspective.
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