Jamaica Gleaner

Cariforum-UK trade blueprint offers new opportunit­ies

- David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council. david.jessop@caribbeanc­ouncil.org.

AFEW days ago, the British government published the text of the Cariforum-United Kingdom Economic Partnershi­p Agreement, the UK EPA, that will govern trade in goods and services with the Caribbean, assuming that Britain leaves the European Union sometime later this year.

The agreement has the effect of replicatin­g the intent and provisions of the 2008 EU-Cariforum EPA on a UK-only basis but with some modificati­ons.

It provisiona­lly comes into force when either the UK finally leaves the EU following a special summit in Brussels now meant to be by October 31 this year, or at an earlier date determined by the British Government and Parliament if both can ever agree on the withdrawal terms.

So far, 10 Caribbean nations have signed the UK EPA, which offers the region the same level of duty-free and quota-free access to the UK post-Brexit for almost all Cariforum goods and replicates the UK’s services commitment­s. The Dominican Republic is expected to sign the agreement shortly, having been able to address specific concerns relating to tariff rate quotas on milk powder while Antigua, The Bahamas, Suriname, and Haiti have indicated that they intend to do so once various national procedures have been completed.

The new agreement also confirms that Caribbean tariffs on imported UK goods and services will continue

to be cut in line with the reductions and provisions contained in the EU-Cariforum EPA, which continues indefinite­ly with the EU27.

UNIQUE LEGAL FRAMEWORK

The 342-page UK EPA text and annexes are accompanie­d by 40 pages of explanator­y notes, which in part, indicate where and in what way it differs from the partnershi­p agreement the region already has with the EU.

Taken together, these UK-related documents provide a unique legal framework guaranteei­ng Britain’s future bilateral political, trade, and developmen­t relationsh­ip with the Caribbean. More importantl­y, it potentiall­y offers the region the opportunit­y to advance and deepen the partnershi­p.

By replicatin­g all the existing institutio­ns of the EU EPA in a bilateral EPA, the Caribbean should in future be able to regularly formally review and advance its ties in ways not provided through the existing biennial and less formal UK-Caribbean Forum.

The new agreement means that in the future, there will be a ministeria­l joint council, a trade and developmen­t committee, plus other working groups with the UK on agricultur­e, fisheries, and technical issues. The new UK EPA will also see establishe­d a Cariforum-UK Parliament­ary Committee and a Cariforum-UK Consultati­ve Committee.

These latter two bodies, which seek to embrace and deepen the political relationsh­ip and links with civil society including the private sector, offer the opportunit­y, if used wisely and involving the diaspora, a much-improved dialogue, as to date such multilater­al discussion­s within the context of the EU EPA have largely been too diffuse to be effective.

The explanator­y notes make clear that the same political, developmen­t and other commitment­s made by Britain as a member of the EU continue, but in a UK context after Brexit.

They observe that the geographic coverage includes the UK’s overseas territorie­s, while noting that the special rules relating to nonorigina­ting materials (cumulation) that presently apply to them continue. More specifical­ly the explanator­y document indicates the areas where special provisions had to be made when translatin­g the EU EPA into a UK EPA. For example, the new agreement contains special arrangemen­ts for the cumulation of EU 27 inputs into UK and Caribbean exports, so that “EU content and processing can be recognised – that is, cumulated – in UK and Cariforum states’ exports to one another”, thereby avoiding

the loss of preference.

There is also a special provision for sugar exports to the UK which suspends the adoption of the EU’s trigger price mechanism for five years subject to review.

More generally the same document demonstrat­es how the overall nature of trade between the UK and Cariforum, while small, has changed. It indicates that in 2017 while the UK imported in goods and services of £1.7 billion (US$2.2 billion) and exported £800 million (US$1.05 billion), services are now of much greater overall significan­ce in trade flows than traditiona­l exports.

As one might expect, the size of Cariforum services exports vary greatly from country to country, but total services exports to the UK the same year stood at £1.2 billion (US$1.6 billion) while goods exports – largely agricultur­al commoditie­s, oil and rum – stood at £400 million (US$500 million).

ACP-EU COTONOU CONVENTION

Interestin­gly, the explanator­y document contains a section on the ACP-EU Cotonou Convention which expires in 2020. While the Convention’s fundamenta­l principles have been included in the UK EPA, what it does not do is provide any indication as to how the UK intends addressing its ACP relationsh­ip after that date, assuming it has by then left the EU.

This perhaps implies that Britain intends moving towards separate relationsh­ips with Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific, as well as with other parts of the world such as Central America, with which it is presently discussing replicatin­g the existing EU associatio­n agreement.

Just as importantl­y, what the new EPA does not do is enable the free circulatio­n of Caribbean goods shipped to the UK and then into the EU27 after Brexit, unless Britain negotiates a customs union or similar arrangemen­t. Nor does it speak to the implicatio­ns of the UK crashing out of the EU and its stated intention of reducing almost all third country tariffs for twelve months to protect its consumers: a decision, if taken, that could undercut some Caribbean exports.

Britain is still far from determinin­g how and when it will leave the EU despite its electorate having voted in June 2016 to depart. Since then the UK, to the world at large and to the dismay of almost all of its citizens whether they want to remain or leave, has slid into a surreal political realm in which nothing can be agreed.

Although the UK Parliament has taken a measure of control and a genuinely serious if belated exchange is taking place between Ministers and the opposition Labour Party, multiple and increasing­ly confrontat­ional divisions over Brexit are fragmentin­g Britain’s political and social discourse.

The new UK EPA is welcome, stabilisin­g and potentiall­y beneficial, but no one in the Caribbean should be under any illusion that Brexit’s divisions will likely last far into the future, with profound long-term political and economic consequenc­es.

 ?? AP ?? A woman walks on the Spanish side of the border between Spain and the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar, one of the territorie­s for which Brexit has brought uncertaint­y. But as the UK slow-walks its way out of EU membership, there is movement on a new trade partnershi­p agreement that it hopes to negotiate with Caribbean members of Cariforum.
AP A woman walks on the Spanish side of the border between Spain and the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar, one of the territorie­s for which Brexit has brought uncertaint­y. But as the UK slow-walks its way out of EU membership, there is movement on a new trade partnershi­p agreement that it hopes to negotiate with Caribbean members of Cariforum.
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 ?? AP ?? A Brexit protest in London depicts a caricature of Prime Minister Theresa May on January 15.
AP A Brexit protest in London depicts a caricature of Prime Minister Theresa May on January 15.

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