Joe Mayes Profile picture
17 Feb, 10 tweets, 4 min read
Exclusive: the government was about to publish a plan for monitoring and evaluating free-trade deals in December. Then it signed the Brexit deal, and the plan was shelved 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
In an internal email seen by Bloomberg, the Department for International Trade was due to publish this document - Free Trade Agreements: Monitoring and Evaluation Framework - in the w/c Dec. 14, just before the Brexit deal was concluded on Christmas Eve 2/ Image
It commits the government to detailed scrutiny of new FTAs it signs -- biennial monitoring reports, and a full evaluation report within five years 3/ ImageImage
The document has not been published. An official source said it was held back because the government didn't want the level of scrutiny outlined in the plan to be applied to the EU trade deal 4/
Another official source said work on evaluating trade deals was stopped because it coincided with the signing of the Brexit accord 5/
I asked DIT: 1) Why was the document held back? 2) When will it be published? 3) Will it be applied to the U.K.-EU trade deal? Their reply: `We do not comment on leaks' 6/
The context here is that the government has said it won't publish an impact assessment of the UK-EU deal, despite having done so for other major FTAs, like the deal with Japan 7/
DIT is also facing criticism from opposition MPs for deflecting Brexit questions to other departments - see latest letter from @EmilyThornberry 8/
So will this trade scrutiny plan ever emerge? Will we get biennial monitoring reports and an evaluation report of the Brexit deal within 5 years? Let's see... ends/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
New: Labour has called on the government to explain why this document wasn't published. `It's no surprise that the government is trying to avoid scrutiny in this area,' says shadow international trade minister @Bill_Esterson bloomberg.com/news/articles/…

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More from @Joe_Mayes

10 Feb
This is a pretty stunning paragraph in the EU's letter to Michael Gove. It effectively claims the U.K. is not enforcing the Northern Ireland Protocol 1/
And the UK request to extend grace periods for trade? It gets a hard knockback. Essentially EU says: this is what you signed up to, so do it 2/
Big question for the UK now - what does it do? Johnson has threatened activate Article 16 of the protocol - which allows you to suspend parts of it - if the trade issues weren't resolved. But will he actually follow through... 3/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Read 7 tweets
10 Feb
New: Just as Britain's pubs and restaurants expect a post-lockdown boom, a new Brexit problem threatens to spoil the party... 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
From April and July, the U.K. will impose new import controls on food and drink coming from the EU -- which makes up about 30% of Britain's food supply. (Up until now, the government has been waving this stuff through the border) 2/
The timing of these new checks -- extra paperwork, border control posts -- coinciding with a likely surge in demand for eating out etc, has executives very worried. `It's going to be like a Big Bang, a peak season of all peak seasons,' said Peter Ward of @UKWarehouse 3/
Read 9 tweets
9 Feb
New: The U.K. won't publish an impact assessment of its trade deal with the EU 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
The PM's spokesman was repeatedly asked today if we'd get a formal assessment -- like we've had for other trade deals, such as the Japan accord 2/ gov.uk/government/pub…
But no joy. The reply: `We’ve set out the detail of the deal, and the opportunities and benefits it provides the U.K. We’ve been clear it’s a good deal, which allows us to maintain access to the EU market.' 3/
Read 6 tweets
3 Feb
Exclusive: Labour condemns ‘denial and bluster’ of government’s Brexit response as red tape bites 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
In a letter from @RachelReevesMP to Michael Gove seen by Bloomberg, Labour says the government seems to have ‘no plan’ to deal with problems firms face from new bureaucracy 2/
Reeves is particularly critical on customs agent capacity - industry said it needed 50,000, but thinks only 12,000 were trained. And funds to train more have run out.. 3/ bloomberg.com/amp/news/artic…
Read 8 tweets
21 Jan
New: more than half of firms moving goods between EU and UK have faced delays since Jan 1, due to Brexit and Covid impact 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/… w/ @lizzzburden
The data comes from a survey of 185 supply chain managers by the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply. CIPS economist John Glen said: `As the transportation of goods grows, so will the queues.' 2/
Other interesting data points from today -- Emma Churchill, who's leading the civil service effort on the border, said freight levels are currently at about 70% of the norm across the short straits 3/
Read 5 tweets
19 Jan
Exclusive: a key customs system has been overwhelmed by Brexit, delaying exports and deepening trouble at the border 1/ bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Welcome to the world of transit, a core system that helps companies move goods into the EU post-Brexit. But the process is already breaking down. Here's what's going wrong... 2/
A shortage of transit guarantees. To issue transit documents -- which allow goods to cross the EU border and not be stopped at customs -- you need a transit guarantee, often backed by a bank, which covers any customs duties or taxes that might need to be paid...3/
Read 16 tweets

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