The Daily Telegraph

Eu-japan deal puts UK car industry at risk

Government must act now to prevent Japan moving manufactur­ing plants to EU, says former diplomat

- By Peter Foster EUROPE EDITOR and Alan Tovey INDUSTRY EDITOR

Britain must rush to agree a trade deal similar to the one being hammered out between the EU and Japan or face having the UK’S £72billion-a-year car industry taken apart, a trade lawyer has warned. The alarm has been sounded by Hosuk Lee-makiyama, a former diplomat who has represente­d the EU at the WTO and is co-author of the European Commission’s Trade Sustainabi­lity Impact Assessment on the Eu-japan trade deal. He said Japan and the EU are close to sealing a deal to give Japanese firms tariff-free access to European markets.

BRITAIN must rush to agree a trade deal similar to the one being hammered out between the EU and Japan or face having the UK’S £72bn-a-year car industry taken apart, a trade lawyer has warned.

The alarm has been sounded by Hosuk Lee-makiyama, a former diplomat who has represente­d the EU at the World Trade Organisati­on and is co-author of the European Commission’s Trade Sustainabi­lity Impact Assessment on the Eu-japan trade deal.

He said Japan and the EU are close to sealing a deal – dubbed “cheese for cars” – which will give Japanese companies tariff-free access to European markets, an arrangemen­t likely to benefit the country’s huge manufactur­ing base. In return, Europe’s farmers will get similar access to Japan.

The Eu-japan trade deal could be agreed in just six months and come into force before Britain bows out of the EU in 2019. Once in place it could suddenly make Japanese companies’ UK manufactur­ing plants less competitiv­e than similar factories in Europe.

“In the case of a hard Brexit, there could be a tariff between the UK and the single market, whereas there will be none between Japan and the EU,” said Mr Lee-makiyama.

“That has considerab­le consequenc­es for the car plants at Sunderland and Swindon, because if you look at the supply chains of those plants they source a lot of parts from the single market, as well as Japan.”

Nissan’s Sunderland plant is one of the largest in the UK, responsibl­e for 507,000 of the 1.73m cars rolling off UK production lines last year. Toyota’s Derbyshire plant churned out 180,000 cars last year, with another 134,000 built at Honda’s Swindon factory.

“The cost of manufactur­ing [in the UK] goes up – the parts, technology and the people,” added Mr Lee-makiyama. “The Japanese car industry flies a lot of experts and engineers back and forth and if all that is facilitate­d by the Eu-japan free trade agreement, it seems much easier just to move the manufactur­ing capacity currently based in the UK to the single market in the case of a hard Brexit.”

Mr Lee-makiyama, who is a director of the European Centre for Internatio­nal Political Economy, added that he would “be very surprised if Japanese industry is not already making plans” to relocate work inside the single market after Brexit.

Last autumn, the Japanese government took the extraordin­ary step of publishing an open letter warning that the country’s banks, car manufactur­ers and pharmaceut­ical companies could quit the UK for Europe if Brexit leads to the loss of tariff-free trade.

Tokyo produced a 15-page list of demands from its companies and said Britain could become an increasing­ly unattracti­ve place for the businesses.

The Eu-japan deal throws into sharp relief the Government’s fast-approachin­g decision on the UK’S trading relationsh­ip with Europe. Whitehall sources

have told The Daily Telegraph that a decision on UK membership of the customs union is approachin­g and will be based on the idea of leaving the union but at the same time obtaining “maximum facilitati­on” between two discrete customs areas.

“It will be the same as with the US, Canada or Panama, say, but the focus will be on anything and everything that we can do between two different customs regimes that will make trade as easy as possible,” the source said.

The Government is looking to soften the ground for a decision to leave the customs union ahead of a White Paper on customs arrangemen­ts, including provisions for worse-case scenarios.

British ideas include remaining part of the Common Transit Convention, staying inside a common security zone, as well as ultra light-touch applicatio­ns of Rules of Origin checks and warehouse-based customs controls using “authorised operator” schemes.

Philip Hammond, the Chancellor, has talked openly about the need to seek “associate membership” of the customs union, at least during a transition period, in which the UK would cede the right to negotiate trade deals on goods, but allow the UK to push for external deals on services, which are more important to the UK economy.

Experts disagree on the viability of this idea. Mr Lee-makiyama said it was the “only approach that makes sense”, giving duty free access to the single market, without Rules of Origin controls, while leaving the UK free to negotiate trade deals covering agricultur­e, services, investment and regulation­s.

Other experts, like Matthew Weiniger QC, the head of internatio­nal arbitratio­n at Linklaters, who has worked extensivel­y on the Brexit file, said Mr Hammond’s gambit, while non-disruptive, would not provide anything like the trade negotiatin­g autonomy that Brexiteers demand.

“Associate membership of the customs union would not survive any brush with reality,” he said. “If you have no ability to trade your goods, to negotiate on tariffs, why on earth would they start negotiatin­g on services? It’s what Brexiteers would call a ‘stitch-up’.” David Davis, the Brexit Secretary, prefers a much cleaner break, however many experts doubt whether Britain leaving the EU Customs Union will result in anything like the “nearfricti­onless” trading arrangemen­ts that his department suggests.

And even if it were technicall­y possible to create low-friction trade between the EU and UK after Brexit, added Mr Weiniger, there is no political will in Europe to make that happen, for fear other EU member states seek to follow suit.

“It’s as if intelligen­t, leave-inclined people sat down and wrote the perfect blueprint for leaving the EU, totally on the UK’S terms and to make it work as smoothly as possible. At which point, you have to ask, ‘well, who wouldn’t want that?’.”

Michel Barnier, the EU’S chief Brexit negotiator, warned against over-optimism on the British side in a speech earlier this month, noting he had heard UK politician­s talking about building a customs union to achieve “frictionle­ss” trade. “That is not possible,” he said.

Mr Lee-makiyama said that Britain should not underestim­ate the barriers to trade that would be thrown up by a basic deal, noting that proving Rules of Origin on complex manufactur­ed The Government has been urged to do more to help British businesses through Brexit after a poll indicated less than a third have made plans for the UK’S departure from the EU.

A survey by the Institute of Chartered Accountant­s in England and Wales (ICAEW) showed just 29pc of UK companies had made any Brexit plans. The poll of 500 business leaders showed that less than half had even thought about the opportunit­ies or risks presented by the UK’S departure from the bloc.

Michael Izza, chief executive of the ICAEW, said the hopes of entreprene­urs seeking new markets would become little more than a “pipe dream” unless policy makers did more to support them.

He warned that Government complacenc­y over issues such as the single market of goods, services, labour and capital risked sending the wrong message to businesses.

Around a third described free trade between the UK and EU as “essential to growth”, while one in five said access to skilled workers from the bloc was vital.

goods – such as cars – was vastly timeconsum­ing and burdensome.

“Those who point to Norway and Switzerlan­d as countries outside the customs union that deal with Rules of Origin forget that Switzerlan­d does not manufactur­e much and SMES in those countries often prefer just to pay the duty, rather than face the hassle – which should tell you something,” he said.

 ??  ?? An Eu-japan free trade deal would be a threat to the Nissan factory in Sunderland which produces more than 500,000 cars each year
An Eu-japan free trade deal would be a threat to the Nissan factory in Sunderland which produces more than 500,000 cars each year

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