The Mail on Sunday

LEAKED EMAILS: BRITAIN DOESN’T NEED FARMERS

No 10 brands senior mandarin who quit over Priti Patel row ‘ Sir Calamity’, then major new Whitehall storm erupts. . .

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

ONE of the Government’s most senior officials has made the incendiary suggestion that Britain does not need its own farming industry.

In leaked emails obtained by The Mail on Sunday, powerful Treasury adviser Tim Leunig argues that the food sector is not ‘critically important’ to the economy – and that agricultur­e and fishery production ‘certainly isn’t’. In his astonishin­g remarks – which comes as the UK prepares to enter crunch post-Brexit trade talks with Donald Trump – Dr Leunig implies that the UK could follow the example of Singapore ‘ which is rich without having its own agricultur­al sector’.

Dr Leunig is a long-standing colleague of Boris Johnson’s No 10 enforcer Dominic Cummings, and his interventi­on exemplifie­s the radical thinking within Boris Johnson’s inner circle against bastions of the Establishm­ent such as the Civil Service and the BBC.

Those tensions at the top of Government spilled over in astonishin­g public fashion yesterday when Sir Philip Rutnam, the top civil servant in the Home Office, resigned following a clash with Priti Patel, citing a ‘vicious and orchestrat­ed’ campaign against him.

In response, No 10 sources branded Sir Philip ‘Sir Calamity’ and ‘a poster boy for failure’.

A SENIOR economic adviser to new Chancellor Rishi Sunak has argued that Britain could become ‘like Singapore’ and import all our food.

Dr Tim Leunig – a powerful voice in Whitehall – claims that the agricultur­e and fishing industries make a negligible contributi­on to the economy, and points out that the former British outpost ‘is rich without having its own agricultur­al sector’.

In his controvers­ial comments, he also suggests farmers should not be given tax breaks denied to other industries.

Dr Leunig’s astonishin­g comments come as the UK prepares to enter vital post-Brexit trade talks with both the EU and the US, where negotiator­s would be expected to fight for British farmers. Already the industry has urged the Government not to lower standards to allow cheap, sub-standard products such as chlorinate­d chicken to flood the UK market and put British suppliers out of business.

Last night, a bullish Boris Johnson said: ‘We have the best negotiator­s in the business.’ And he vowed to ‘drive a hard bargain’ with President Donald Trump which would trade ‘Scottish smoked salmon for Stetson hats’.

Dr Leunig, an associate professor at the London School of Economics, who also holds advisory positions in the Education and Environmen­t Department­s, made his arguments in emails sent last week to the National Food Strategy, the Government’s wholesale review of the British food system.

He wrote: ‘Food sector isn’t critically important to the UK, and ag[riculture] and fish production certainly isn’t’. He pointed to figures suggesting that it adds just 0.5 per cent in extra value to the economy.

Dr Leunig then questioned the special tax breaks given to farmers, saying: ‘We know that supermarke­ts also make very little, and that lots of restaurant­s go bust.

‘Not sure I buy a “life is tough for farmers, easy for restaurate­urs” approach.’

When he was challenged by fellow members of the review’s advisory panel, he responded: ‘All I am saying is that, as a logical possibilit­y, a nation (or region) can import stuff. We see that in many places for many goods and services. Singapore imports (almost) all its food, Germany all its oil, Japan all its planes and all its oil, Australia and New Zealand import all their cars, all their planes and all their oil, while Iceland imports oil, cars, planes and graduate-level education.’

Last night, a senior industry insider said: ‘The UK is a fantastic place to produce food and we have some of the highest standards in the world. In a trade deal with the US, we face the prospect of imports of food produced to standards that would be illegal for our own farmers to employ. Why would any adviser to Government seek to decimate our own farming sector?

‘ Surely the first duties of any Government should be to defend and feed its people. It seems to me that a country that cannot feed itself is no country at all.’

But a Government spokesman said that Dr Leunig’s comments were ‘not Government policy’.

Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz

‘Why would any adviser seek to decimate our farming sector?’

Truss will tomorrow announce the UK’s negotiatin­g objectives for a transatlan­tic trade deal, and is set to say it must ‘ uphold our high standards on food safety and animal welfare’ as well as protect the NHS.

The National Farmers’ Union has been pressing the Government not to relax standards, saying it would be ‘ morally bankrupt’ to allow chemically cleaned poultry, hormone-treated beef and geneticall­y modified fruit and vegetables.

The union said it would be ‘insane’ to sign a trade deal on that basis.

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