@DennisNovy He calculates sterling ££ slump drove up import costs, which had the effect of increasing consumer prices by 2.9% - and UK prices up by 1.9% compared to Euro area. /2
@DennisNovy So taking into account decline in real wages, the average house hold had to spend 1.4 weeks' more wages to afford same amount of goods. Or collectively, £450m a week! /3
Well, for a start, since we don't live the counter-factual, these numbers aren't actually felt 'on the street' in a way that necessarily translates into politics.
After all, @BorisJohnson
just won an 80-seat mandate to double down /4
@DennisNovy@BorisJohnson But it also - and this where things get dangerous, I fear - fuels the idea in the upper political echelons of government that the economy can be 'decoupled' from politics. /5
@DennisNovy@BorisJohnson So you can do really quite damaging things and not suffer political costs.
@realDonaldTrump trade policy has, in aggregate, hit US manufacturers with higher costs, but it might not yet stop him winning re-election. /6
@DennisNovy@BorisJohnson@realDonaldTrump As we contemplate the coming EU-UK trade negotation, we have cabinet ministers airily waving away the concerns of industry, blithely declaring that sectors like cars and chemicals are in "secular decline" /7
@DennisNovy@BorisJohnson@realDonaldTrump After @sajidjavid said the UK would diverge and business would have to face the consequences, groups like @SMMT that represent car makers said it would cost "billions", but this government apparently doesn't care.
Post #Brexit, for example, a UK-car company will have to show that a vehicle is more than 50% made with UK 'content' to export at preferential rates, to say, South Korea. A UK car is typically 30% UK made. One 'fix' is to switch to EU. /9
@DennisNovy@BorisJohnson@realDonaldTrump@sajidjavid@SMMT So this is already happening. In July BMW shifted engine production from its Hams Hall plant to Germany to ensure that its cars destined for South Africa could meet content thresholds. /10
@BorisJohnson still won an 80-seat majority, backed by people in living in the West Midlands - Hams Hall is in Warwickshire constituency of @craig4nwarks - Conservativ, Maj, 17,956 /11
The risk for the Government, I suspect, is complacency.
They believe economics and politics are decoupled, and wave away warnings about the cost of #Brexit as over-stated....even though they come from industries that, presumably, know their own business. /15
The word from Whitehall is not really encouraging - staggering levels ignorance and arrogance at the very top of government, backed by much of what I've written above. /16
It must be hoped that fear of a really noticeable, headline making cock-up - say massive queues at Dover, Nissan announcing it's pulling out of UK - will be sufficient for @BorisJohnson to step in and temper some of the wilder ideas. /17
Recall that last year we were definitely having a 'north-south border' and a 'no deal' - "do or die".
Until we were not. Then all those ideas were junked in a trice for a NI-only backstop and the fact of deal - any deal.
This may be the template for phase 2. Or it may not/18
I still think that the message of the election was "get Brexit done".
NOT "come with me on the Long March to the sunny uplands.
I'm still betting that the desire for a quiet life comes to trump the current brave talks. But I can see how I'd be wrong.
Good weekend all. ENDS
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NEW: Brussels issues UK list of “good faith” tests to fully implement EU-UK #Brexit divorce deal if it wants deeper relationship — not a bust up, but a clear reminder this won’t be easy. My and my esteemed Brussels colleague @AndyBounds via @ft /1
The gripes are about fully implementing Windsor Framework — the deal that removed appearance of Irish Sea border — but still needs vet checks, parcel data, pet microchip checks, accurate certification of agrifoods. Which EU says isn’t fully happening. /2
Also some concerns still about treatment of EU citizens under the post Brexit settled
status scheme.
The UK Government says it’s fully committed to getting all this fixed. What’s interstate is EU Commission to make the point it needs doing — at first meeting. /3
A quick (I promise) thread on @RachelReevesMP promises to boost EU-UK trade by aligning on regs (eg chemicals), doing a veterinary deal (no SPS checks) and boosting services via 'mutual recognition of professional qualifications' - taking each in order /1
First alignment. Two points: 1. via @joelreland of @UKandEU 'alignment doesn't get you access'.
See his new report here, setting out why technical agreements to improve EU-UK trade will have 'minimal' impact on economy /2
@joelreland @UKandEU 2. Not ALL industry want full-fat unilateral alignment. Even the food industry, you hear different voices (what about x, y, z pesticide use to grow barley/beets etc) OR in chemicals, see Chemical Industries Association @See_Chem_Bus to me here🚨🚨/3
NEW: Gove’s top-down plan to build 150,000 houses in Cambridge by 2040 declared “nonsensical” by local council leaders because they don’t have water supply to build existing plan for 50,000 by that date! 🤯 But Gove keeps giving interviews promising it/1
“The 150,000 homes would appear to just be nonsensical, if I’m honest, because the infrastructure just isn’t there,” Mike Davey, @mikelode1 Labour leader of Cambridge City Council /2
@mikelode1 “We are a pro-growth council, but we’ve run out of water. So that leaves us with a lot of questions about how this can be delivered. Gove has to solve the water problem and the energy problem or it can’t be done,” Bridget Smith, LD leader of South Cambridgeshire @cllrbridget /3
First the gaslighting: his deal is a ‘reverse’ trade deal…it erects barriers, it doesn’t remove them. It’s only “broadest deal ever” if UK started from zero relations, rather than working down from Single Market membership. As he well knows, but I wonder about the readers.😬 /2
Second the one bit of truth. To get closer to EU and fix bits of his rubbish deal, the UK will become a big rule taker. That will be hard. What Frost omits to say is that’s a pure function of the hideous position his #Brexit deal has put the UK in. And no seat at the table. /3
🚨🚨when ministers aren’t bashing UK universities they love to boast about them. Rightly. But unless something changes on funding there will be a lot less to boast about in 10 years time. /1
As Simon Marginson Higher Education prof at Oxford University explains the UK is in danger of getting back to the funding crisis levels that sparked need for tuition fees…/2
These charts by @amy_borrett explain the basic problem. Triple whammy of inflation, #Brexit and risky over reliance on international students to x-subsidise undergrad teaching (previously used to make up research grant shortfalls). /3
What he's getting at is that #Brexit is not, as is still widely supposed, a one-off event that companies adjust to.
It's a permanent friction that makes UK companies a risker bet for your supply chain than an EU company. And that matters for maufacturing/2
That's because 50 per cent of UK exports are from manufacturing, and of those that go to EU, around 50 per cent feed into EU supply chains -- so they make bits of things that criss-cross Europe to become whole things that then get exported to rest of world. /3