LONDON – Britain will face severe disruptions at its ports and food shortages if it fails to strike a trade deal with the European Union before the end of the year, according to a new report, which also warns that the economic impact of a no deal Brexit would be three times that of the coronavirus pandemic.
Britain officially left the European Union on January 31, and the current transition period is due to end on December 31. The British government warned Wednesday that most businesses that trade with Europe had yet to prepare for the coming changes.
The recent report from Kings College Londons UK in a Changing Europe program warns that “the most immediate and visible impact of a no deal with the EU will be seen at the border, with risks of queues and shortages of food.”
That would be felt most acutely around the port of Dover, where some 4 million trucks use the ferry and Eurotunnel rail crossings to and from Calais, France every year. Even with a trade deal, Britain will leave the EUs single market and customs union, meaning some new checks and trade barriers will be unavoidable. Without a trade deal, there will be much greater disruption, with Britain and the EU imposing tariffs on each other’s goods.
The British government warned Wednesday that up to 60 percent of heavy goods vehicles (HGVs) may not have the right paperwork.
“They’d therefore be turned back by the French border authorities, clogging the Dover to Calais crossing,” Cabinet Minister Michael Gove told lawmakers. “And in such circumstance, that could lead to queues of up to 7,000 HGVs.”
There will also be significant disruption for British travelers to the EU, says Kings College report co-author Jonathan Portes.
“Youll need health insurance. Its unclear how international driving permits will work; if you apply to go for work you may well need a visa,” Portes told VOA in an interview Thursday.
Eighty percent of Britains economy is made up of services. In London, Portes says banks and financial services are already prepared for no deal. “And so theyve relocated legal entities, some staff and so on to deal with that.”
JP Morgan Chase is the latest bank to announce such a move this week – shifting $230 billion in assets from London to Germany.
Britains economy has already shrunk by a fifth this year owing to the coronavirus pandemic. The report warns the economic effects of a no deal Brexit could be much greater.