Sunderland Echo

Food price fears over European trade talks

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Shoppers will face higher prices for their weekly shop due to mammoth tariffs unless a free trade deal is secured with the EU, a leading trade body has warned.

The British Retail Consortium (BRC) said supermarke­ts and their shoppers will face an annual £3.1bn tariff bill for food and drink.

The industry group said retailers will have "nowhere to go other than to raise the price of food" to mitigate the tariffs if there is no deal before Christmas.

It said many non-food retailers will also face "large tariff bills" for EU-sourced products.

Andrew O pie, director of food and sustainabi­lity at the BRC, said: "Unless we negotiate a zero-tariff deal with the EU, the public will face higher prices for their weekly shop.

"This would prevent harm to shoppers, retailers and the wider economy."

The EU is the UK's largest trading partner and the source of four-fifths of UK food imports, the BRC said.

In May, the UK published its new tariff schedule, which will be implemente­d by January 1 next year if a deal is not agreed.

Under the schedule, 85% of foods imported from the EU will face tariffs of more than 5%, while the average tariff on food imported from the EU would be over 20%.

Earlier this month, the chief of Morris ons, David Potts, said grocery prices will increase in a no-deal Brexit scenario.

Mr Opie said :" UK consumers have benefited from great value, quality, and choice of food thanks to tariff-free trade with the EU.

"There is no time to waste, the UK and EU must hammer out a final arrangemen­t as soon as possible."

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