The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.K. aims to prepare public for split with EU

Campaign reminds Brits Jan. 1 to bring new costs, red tape.

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LONDON — The British government told individual­s and businesses Monday to get ready for new costs and red tape — but also an exciting “new start” — when the U.K. leaves the European Union’s economic embrace in less than six months.

The government unveiled details of new border arrangemen­ts and a major public informatio­n campaign to remind Britons that Brexit has not gone away, even though it has been knocked out of the headlines by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Britain officially left the EU on Jan. 31, but remains inside the bloc’s economic orbit until the end of 2020.

Advertisem­ents under the “The U.K.’s new start: let’s get going” campaign will warn British tourists that starting Jan. 1 they’ll need to buy health insurance, arrange paperwork for their pets and check their telephone provider’s roaming policy when they travel to the EU.

Companies that do business with the 27-nation bloc — which accounts for about half of Britain’s trade — will have to fill in customs declaratio­ns and potentiall­y pay tariffs, depending on the outcome of talks about a postBrexit free-trade deal. The British government has softened the blow for importers by saying they would not have to complete full customs declaratio­ns or pay tariffs for the first six months of next year.

Even with a deal, the U.K. will need a vast new customs and border infrastruc­ture to deal with trade that has flowed unimpeded during the U.K.’s 47 years as a member of the European bloc. The government announced Monday that it plans to spend 705 million pounds ($890 million) on new border posts, computer systems and personnel.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government says the burdens of Brexit will be offset by new economic opportunit­ies as the U.K. strikes fresh trade deals around the world.

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove, who is in charge of Brexit preparatio­ns, said the full break with the bloc “will herald changes and significan­t opportunit­ies, for which we all need to prepare.”

Britain and the EU have given themselves until the end of the year to strike a deal on trade, security and a host of other issues.

But negotiatio­ns have bogged down amid wide difference­s on major issues including fishing rights and competitio­n. Even with a deal, the U.K. faces new barriers to business with the EU. Without one, it faces an abrupt, disruptive departure that would hammer many businesses, and with the U.K. economy already hammered by COVID-19. One major change will be the end of Britons’ freedom to live and work anywhere in the EU, and of Europeans’ right to settle in the U.K.

More than 3 million EU citizens currently living in the U.K. are entitled to stay. But from January 1, 2021, new immigratio­n rules will apply to EU and non-EU citizens alike.

 ?? AP ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government says burdens of Brexit will be offset by economic opportunit­ies as the U.K. strikes fresh trade deals.
AP Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government says burdens of Brexit will be offset by economic opportunit­ies as the U.K. strikes fresh trade deals.

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