The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1

20 Britain The EconomistAugust 4th 2018


2 Kent. Unilateral free trade would ravage
British farming and manufacturing. And
one-way free trade does not help lorry
drivers who must return fully laden.
No deal also means a hard Irish border.
Again Brexiteers say London and Dublin
could agree not to have one. But with no
deal that would be illegal under the EU’s
own rules as well as those of the WTO.
Agrifoods which account for most of the
trade across the border would be badly af-
fected. As well as tariffs EU food-safety
checks would have to be applied to avoid
Northern Ireland becoming an open con-
duit to evade them. A hard border would
rattle the delicate peace process.
Then there are British firms’ supply
chains. These are now widely spread
across the single market. Supermarkets
and carmakers alike rely on just-in-time
deliveries that would be disrupted by a no-
deal Brexit. Switching to non-EUsources
would take time and money. So would
stockpiling supplies which for most busi-
nesses is impractical (see box).
Regulatory obstacles would be even
worse. A no-deal Brexit would take Britain
out of all the EU’s agencies as well as its
courts. Brexiteers may welcome this but
setting up alternatives would take years.
The EUis clear that trade in goods like
chemicals pharmaceuticals or cars de-
pends on Britain meeting its standards.
Britain’s car industry which employs
800000 people and exports 80% of its out-
put is especially vulnerable as it would
lose EUcertification for vehicles as well as
facing 10% tariffs.
There are no domesticregulators to re-
place the European Medicines Agency and
the European Aviation Safety Agency
(EASA). The first would stop drug exports
but also imports like insulin that may re-
quire re-testing. Radio-isotopes needed for
cancer treatments could not be imported
after Britain leaves Euratom. Outside
EASA airlines could not fly within Europe.
Rules requiring majority EU ownership
could cause problems for airlines such as
British Airways.
The list goes on. A priority for Brexiteers
is to stop free movement ofEUcitizens. But
shortages of border guards and the lack of
any registration system will make this im-
possible for many months. So free move-
ment would be likely to continue even
after a no-deal Brexit says Joe Owen of the
Institute for Government a think-tank. Se-
curity co-operation would also suffer as
Britain fell out of the European Arrest War-
rant and intelligence databases.
Brexiteers may call this Project Fear 2.0
but the evidence is against them. Market
confidence would suffer. John Springford
of the Centre for European Reform a think-
tank says a no-deal Brexit would trigger
both a recession and a run on the pound.
No deal is not a serious option even if to-
day’s febrile politics pretends it is. 7

The economics of stockpiling

Prepping for Brexit


B

REXITEERS said that leaving theEU
would lead Britain to a land flowing
with milk and honey. But as worries of a
no-deal Brexit mount the country is
instead talking of hoarding emergency
rations. Google searches for the word
“stockpile” have jumped in the past
week approaching the all-time high seen
shortly after the referendum of June 2016.
Some countries could just about cope
if their borders were closed to imports at
least in the short term. Britain is not one
of them. Imports and exports are worth
over 60% of British GDP twice America’s
level. Half of Britain’s food comes from
abroad most passing through EUports.
The Brexit secretary has promised not
entirely reassuringly that there will be
“adequate food” whatever happens; the
health secretary has said the NHSis
preparing to stockpile medicine. Yet it is
not clear that enough is being done to
honour these pledges. Britain spends
some £50bn ($66bn) a year on medicine
and non-perishable food from the EU. So
stocking up with enough for justa month
would cost around £4bn—more than the
entire no-deal planning budget of £3bn
set aside in November. Nor is there any
sign that reserves are being built up. Food
and medicine imports have been steady
in recent months.
Companies many of whose manufac-
turing methods rely on raw materials and
components zipping between produc-
tion facilities in different countries are
also talking about stockpiling. Airbus
says it has asked its suppliers to start
“ramping up” their stock of components
for its aeroplanes. Pharmaceutical firms

including AstraZeneca Novartis and
Sanofi have said that they will increase
their inventories.
Yet the hoarders seem to be in the
minority. Take JJChurchill a supplier of
turbine blades to the aviation industry.
The firm held a board meeting on July 31st
to discuss whether to stockpile parts and
decided against as it would tie up too
much working capital. Andrew Chur-
chill the executive chairman argues that
the fog of Brexit makes it unclear which
parts are vulnerable to disruption.
Economy-wide data reveal little evi-
dence of firms preparing for “no deal”.
Firms’ stocks of inventories are if any-
thing falling. Our analysis of over 5
categories of goods shows that imports
of parts raw materials and machinery—
“capital” and “intermediate” goods in
the jargon—are in fact declining. That is
consistent with a nervousness about the
future though of a different sort. It could
suggest that bosses are worried about the
strength of demand after Brexit and may
therefore be trimming investment in
future production.
If Brexit day approaches with no deal
in sight companies and the government
may decide that stockpiling is unavoid-
able. At that point they would face a
problem: a shortage of warehousing.
Vacancy rates are already low thanks in
part to the expansion of e-tailers such as
Amazon. And stockpiling would require
a huge amount of space. Britain guzzles
3bn litres of imported booze every year.
A month’s supply would be enough to fill
100 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
Better start digging.

Stockpiling is the talk of the country but is anyone actually doing it?
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