Peter Foster Profile picture
Sep 30, 2020 13 tweets 17 min read Read on X
Today in a leaked letter Lord Frost concedes that EU will not give UK preferential trade terms to UK cars...but that is not what @BorisJohnson
promised on 2019 election trail. So does that matter? 1/thread

ft.com/content/4fa473…
@BorisJohnson First the letter (that was first reported by @faisalislam) which tl;dr says "we asked for preferential terms, the EU said no"....

This relates particularly to so-called 'rules of origin' - the need for a car to be 45% UK-made to get 0-tariff access to EU under an FTA/2
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam The problem, as @Petercampbell1 points out is that companies like Nissan and Toyota use parts from Japan and the EU won't let those count or "cross-cumulate" as UK-inputs....not that that should come as any surprise. /3
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 .@MichelBarnier has been banging on for ages about UK not being allowed to be an "assembly hub" off the EU after Brexit...see this speech from Sept 2. /4

ec.europa.eu/commission/pre…
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier But it *might* comes as surprise to UK car workers and voters who were told by @BorisJohnson on the stump that it is "absolutely vital we protect supply chains, we protect Nissan Motors, we make sure people continue to want to invest in our country" /5

autovistagroup.com/news-and-insig…
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier Is there a risk that the No 10 machine is underestimating the impact of #brexit on the car industry? And whether voters might feel angry or short changed?

Genuine question - because I bow to them on this stuff; they are masters of the "narrative" and alternative facts /6
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier So when you see this extraordinary tweet from @Conservatives it's a similar thing - as many have pointed out UK internal market bill doesn't "guarantee seamless" trade, au contraire.../7

@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives Take a read of this report I did this week after @Foodanddrinkfed warned some trade would be "unviable" as a result of regulatory border that's coming in the Irish Sea.../8

ft.com/content/c8c1c9…
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives @Foodanddrinkfed This is the @Foodanddrinkfed graphic setting out the new frictions...doesn't look all that seamless - though the UK Gov hopes that some of this frictions CAN be smoothed away. /9
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives @Foodanddrinkfed Everyone is waiting to see the details - not least industry - and the Govt is spending £200m on a trader support service...but companies are still going to be doing a lot of paperwork, which carries time and cost. Whatever it is, it's not "seamless" /10
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives @Foodanddrinkfed That doesn't mean it cant work - and cross-channel trade in autos will still work because EU and UK will cumulate "bilaterally" - it just might favour EU companies with higher local content percentages. /11
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives @Foodanddrinkfed One of the really interesting things is whether - deal or no deal - any of this cuts through; how hard it will land politically, beyond the respective remainer/brexit bubbles. /12
@BorisJohnson @faisalislam @Petercampbell1 @MichelBarnier @Conservatives @Foodanddrinkfed No-one really knows - even affected industry is v cloudy on impacts - but arguably that isn't helping with clarity of political decision making. Where there is uncertainty it's always possible to construct political case for sticking to "values" and ignoring economic harms ENDS

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More from @pmdfoster

Jan 27
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

ft.com/content/d1c0bf…
“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
Read 8 tweets
Sep 19, 2023
David Frosts column on #Brexit this morning goes in three phases:

- gaslighting readers over his “thin” deal being actually fat 🙄

- some actual truth on UK as rule taker

- and then total failure to admit he’s responsible for this mess 🧵1/4

telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/09/1…
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 Image
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 Image
Read 4 tweets
Jul 18, 2023
🚨🚨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

Here’s why via @ft Big Read…

on.ft.com/3rtAhGF
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 Image
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


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Read 8 tweets
Jun 29, 2023
Went to the Midlands to talk to UK manufacturers about slow #Brexit strangle. @MakeUK_ CEO Stephen Phipson summed up the challenge:

"The question we must ask is, ‘would Airbus make all their wings in the UK, if they were making that decision now’?” /1

https://t.co/YwerpUopHKft.com/content/2f99a9…


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
Read 12 tweets
Mar 22, 2023
This was interesting session. The 'chart wars' are a bit baffling if you're not an economist. I'm not. But I am a reporter. Gudgin argued #Brexit had no effect on the economy, but I don't know how that squares with all the conversations I've had with business in last 6 years/1
I get you can argue over the quantum of #brexit impact -- Springford model says -5.5% GDP, Portes reckons that fees too high, says thinks -2.5%...Jessop said -1%, but transitory...but "nothing" surely doesn't pass the sniff-test (to quote Gudgen on Springford's Doppelgangers /2
The empircal work by Jun Du at Warwick and Thomas Sampson at LSE on the numbers of traded lines/relationships, for example, can't amount to "nothing"; nor can UK parlous trade performance; even if non-differentiated impact on EU v RoW exports isn't yet explained/3
Read 6 tweets
Mar 22, 2023
Graham Gudgin says that @JohnSpringford "doppelganger" method of analysing Brexit is a "statistical artefact" -- one that is used by Office of Budget Responsibility in their March 2023 forecast.

obr.uk/docs/dlm_uploa… == see p.47
Gudgin concludes that Brexit has had no real impact on UK economy. And talk about Brexit masks real reason for productivity crunch. OBR, Bank of England, CER etc and BBC/FT that report these studies are distracting.
Now @JohnSpringford responds to criticisms of his doppelganger method. Says that its misleading to compare individual countries. The Doppelganger composite smooths out differences, which is why it makes better counterfactual.
Read 4 tweets

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