The Economist - UK (2022-04-30)

(Antfer) #1

20 Britain TheEconomistApril30th 2022


the  question  showed  that  27%  supported
immediate  unity  in  2002,  and  30%  sup­
ported it in 2020. Enthusiasm for reunifi­
cation south of the border is hard to detect. 
Nonetheless, a Sinn Féin victory would
have practical as well as symbolic implica­
tions. Under the terms of the Good Friday
Agreement, either of the two main parties
can veto an administration being formed.
The  dup has  refused  to  say  whether  it
would  participate  in  government  if  Sinn
Féin wins. Jim Wells, a former dupminis­
ter, has said publicly that the party should
refuse  to  share  power  with  Sinn  Féin  if  it
were to get the post of first minister. Such a
decision  would  not  just  be  undemocratic
but idiotic: it would almost certainly boost
republican support.
Even if the duppulls off an improbable
victory, however, the province may not get
a  government.  That  is  because  Northern
Ireland now has two disputed borders, not
one.  A  crucial  part  of  Mr  Johnson’s  Brexit
divorce deal was the Northern Ireland Pro­
tocol,  an  agreement  that  the  province
would  stay  in  the  eu’s  single  market  for
goods and in its customs union. The proto­
col avoided checks at the Irish land border
but  created  a  new  Irish  Sea  border,  which
makes  trade  with  Britain  more  difficult
and has left many unionists believing that
ties to “the mainland” are being severed. 
In February the dupbrought down the
devolved government in protest at the pro­
tocol. It says it will not return to the execu­
tive  until  the  sea  border  is  removed.  The
British  government,  which  dislikes  the
protocol for many reasons, has been mak­
ing  noises  about  unilateral  legislation  to
dismantle  bits  of  it.  That  would  not  only
precipitate  a  bitter  clash  with  the  eubut
could  see  Sinn  Féin,  which  strongly  sup­
ports  the  protocol,  itself  refuse  to  enter
government in protest. 
The province has been in this position
before: for three of the past five years, it has
had no government. But according to Ann
Watt of Pivotal, a think­tank, a period with­
out an executive “will inevitably make life
harder for individuals and families here in
Northern  Ireland—with  the  most  vulner­
able people disproportionately affected”.
Moreover,  the  underlying  strains  in
Northern  Irish  politics  are  intensifying.
The  least  confrontational  path  to  getting
rid  of  the  Irish  Sea  border  seems  likely  to
disappear  as  a  result  of  the  elections.  The
Brexit  deal  explicitly  provides  for  a  Stor­
mont vote in 2024 on whether to keep the
Irish  Sea  border;  that  vote  will  be  decided
by  assembly  members  who  are  elected  on
May 5th. Whether the dupclings on as the
largest party or not, it is very unlikely that
unionists will win a majority in Stormont. 
If  unionists  think  they  have  lost  their
chance  to  vote  down  the  protocol,  a  more
militant approach may prevail. A year ago
serious  rioting  erupted  in  several  parts  of

NorthernIreland;paramilitariesinbala­
clavas openlytaughtchildren bornlong
aftertheGoodFridayAgreementhowto
makepetrolbombs.Theviolencesubsided
asunionistleaderssaidpoliticscouldre­
movetheseaborder,butitsthreatlingers.
Onereasonwhyunionismisunlikelyto
wina majorityintheupcomingelectionis
thegrowthinvoterswhoshunthelabelsof
“nationalist”or“unionist”.NorthernIre­
landisnolongera politydividedbyone
sectarianline,butrathera societyofthree
minorities—unionists, nationalists and
thenon­aligned(seechart).Thatsitsvery
awkwardly with political structures de­
signedwithonlytwotribesinmind:the

ballotsofcentristassemblymembersinef­
fectdonotcountinkeyvotes,forexample.
Atsomepoint,theGoodFridayAgreement
willhavetobeamended,a processwhich
willbedeeplycontentious.
WhenacceptinghisNobelprizeinliter­
aturethreeyearsbeforetheagreementwas
signed,the NorthernIrish poetSeamus
Heaneylamented “thedolorouscircum­
stances ofmy nativeplace”.The sorrow
thenwroughtbydailymurderhasbeenre­
placedbythesorrowofpoliticalfailure,
andthatisprogress.Buttheforthcoming
electionsarelikelytounderlinethebrittle­
nessoftheprovince’spolitics.Andbrittle
thingstendtobreak.n

B


rexitwasalwaysgoingtobea
bother.Thequestionwashowmuch
ofoneit wouldbe.Althoughindustries
likefinancialserviceshavenotsuffered
thedisastersomepredicted,it isnothard
tofindaggravatedbusiness­owners
complainingthatleavingtheeuhas
broughtbafflingbureaucracy,higher
costsandfrustratingdelays.A flurryof
newstudiesquantifiesthepain.
OnepaperbytheCentreforEconomic
PerformanceattheLondonSchoolof
EconomicsfindsthatBritain’sdeparture
fromthesinglemarketattheendof 2020
ledtoonlya temporarydipinitsexports
totheeurelativetoitssaleselsewhere.
Butwhentheylookat“tradeties”,orthe
rangeofproductstradedwithdifferent
memberstates,theyfinda plungeof30%
(seeleft­handchart).Thedropisconcen­
tratedinlightertradeflowstodinkier
countries.Thatlookssuspiciouslylike
smallerexportersgivingup.
Anotherstudy,publishedbytheukin
a ChangingEurope,a think­tank,ex­

plorestheeffectsofnewbarriersonthe
tradethatdidcontinue.Facedwithhigh­
ercostswhencrossingBritain’sborders
withtheeu, businessesraisedtheir
prices.Theauthorscompareproducts
likefreshporkortomatoes,whichare
mostlyimportedfromtheeu,withpro­
ductslikepineapples,whichcomefrom
moreexoticclimes.Theyfindthatby
September 2021 Brexithadliftedfood
pricesby6%relativetotheyearsbefore
December2019.(Amootedgovernment
proposaltocutfoodtariffsmighthelp,
thoughremovingnon­tariffbarriers
mattersmoreforimportsfromtheeu.)
ComparingBritain’seconomicperfor­
mancewiththatofsimilarcountries
suggestsa broaderproblem.Catherine
MannoftheBankofEnglandhaspointed
outthatbytheendof 2021 consumer
priceswerearound4%higherthanin
otherwisecomparableeconomiesthat
didnotexperienceBrexit(seeright­hand
chart).Asthecostoflivingsoars,a differ­
enceofthismagnitudereallymatters.

Brexit

Left behind


LeavingtheEuropeanUnionhascrimpedtradeandraisedprices

Something happened
Britain

Sources:CentreforEconomicPerformance;
BankofEngland

*Oneexportvarietyreferstoa productsenttooneparticular country
†Acompositeofselectedcountries similar to Britain

110

100
90

80

70

60
21201918171615142013

Exportvarieties*,Q22016=

Non-EUmarkets

EUmarkets

Brexit
referendum

Tradeand
Co-operation
Agreement

115

110
105

100

95

90
2120191817161514132012

Consumer prices, 201 average=

Comparable
countries†

Britain

Brexit
referendum

Trade and
Co-operation
Agreement
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