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  • Finding an alternative to the EU customs union

  • has been one of the most convoluted jigsaw puzzles in the Brexit negotiations.

  • So what has the UK government proposed, and why

  • does it matter so much?

  • Let's first remind ourselves what the EU customs union actually is.

  • This seemingly sensible trade agreement

  • allows goods to move freely among members.

  • It cuts down on lengthy border checks and paperwork,

  • and creates a smooth supply chain for companies operating across the EU.

  • Sounds ideal, right?

  • Well, there's a catch.

  • Everyone inside the union has to agree

  • to apply a common tariff on goods from outside the bloc,

  • and that's a red line for the UK government.

  • Theresa May wants Britain to be able to negotiate its own trade deals after Brexit.

  • The other challenge is to create a new regulatory area

  • for customs and goods, avoiding a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland.

  • There are three, actually - or at least,

  • there were, until recently.

  • The first two UK proposals, a customs partnership and a maximum facilitation model,

  • have both been rejected by Prime Minister Theresa May's own cabinet and the EU.

  • The latest option is called the facilitated customs arrangement,

  • and it's a sort of hybrid of the first two options.

  • It involves Britain collecting EU tariffs on goods arriving in the UK that are en route to the bloc's

  • single market and sending those tariffs to Brussels.

  • Separate UK tariffs would apply to goods destined for Britain.

  • And if the destination of goods is unclear,

  • then a higher tariff - likely to be the EU one - would apply.

  • The whole plan essentially creates an EU-UK free trade area for industrial goods and agricultural products

  • with a common rulebook.

  • That means no regulatory checks at the border between the UK and the EU, including Ireland.

  • So trade with the EU remains frictionless,

  • but the UK is also free to make its own trade deals with other countries.

  • Isn't this the best of both worlds option, where Britain can have its cake and eat it?

  • Not quite.

  • Under the plan, the UK would agree to regulatory alignment with the EU.

  • So new rules created in Brussels about goods

  • would be made into British law without London having any say.

  • The UK Parliament could reject a rule,

  • but that would risk retaliation by the EU.

  • And services, such as banking and insurance,

  • will be part of a looser agreement.

  • Well, it's complicated.

  • The UK's plan relies on technology that doesn't exist yet.

  • Brussels worries that smugglers could beat the system

  • by paying a lower UK tariff at a British port

  • and then moving their goods into the EU single market.

  • The EU doesn't want to outsource something

  • as important as collecting tariffs to a country outside of the bloc.

  • And then there's the Eurosceptics in the UK

  • who dislike the shift towards a softer Brexit.

  • Oh there's one more thing.

  • Even if Brussels agrees to the customs plan,

  • it still needs the support of the UK Parliament.

Finding an alternative to the EU customs union

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