Some key points from the government's white paper.
The existing customs regime
The UK is a member of the EU customs union and will remain so until Brexit. This means that:
In terms of the legal framework:
What does the UK government want to happen?
The UK government’s position is that the UK will leave the customs union and the single market at Brexit.
The government’s preferred next step after that is for a transitional period, during which there would be a ‘new and time-limited customs union’ between the UK and the EU customs union. This would mean that businesses would only need to adjust to a new UK customs regime once, at the end of the transitional period. That transitional period is currently expected to be ‘around two years’. There would be a shared external tariff and no customs processes and duties between the UK and the EU. After that, the new customs regime would kick in.
None of this has been agreed by, or even (publicly) discussed with, the EU.
What has to happen anyway?
There will be a new Customs Bill.
When the UK leaves the EU at Brexit, all existing EU law will be incorporated into UK law by the Withdrawal Bill. That EU law will then need to be amended so that it ‘works’ and makes sense after Brexit. But the amendment powers under the Withdrawal Bill do not allow revenue raising. Given that, and the complexity of customs legislation, and the need to keep all options open as to what the UK’s future customs, VAT and excise regimes look like in the future, the government has decided to introduce a new Customs Bill to apply after Brexit.
What will the Customs Bill contain?
We don’t know. It hasn’t been published. But as the white paper makes clear, the Bill will allow for all eventualities, including for:
So the Bill will enable the government to create an entirely new and standalone customs, VAT and excise regime that enables the UK to:
Some of those provisions will support the introduction of a new UK trade policy.
The white paper says that ‘in order to provide continuity for business, the customs legislation will mostly be based on the union customs code. The administration of the VAT and excise regimes will remain largely the same as today’.
What might a future customs relationship with the EU look like?
The government set out its ideas on how the future customs relationship with the EU might work (after any transitional period) in a ‘future partnership paper’ in August 2017.
Is the Bill the whole story?
No. Although the Bill is an essential step in establishing a standalone UK customs regime, crucial logistical work is needed to:
Although the white paper has a couple of pages on contingency planning for a hard Brexit, focused on how intense pressure at ro-ro ports could be alleviated, there are few signs that this logistical work has started.
Next steps
We don’t have a publication date for the Bill. The white paper invites comments by 3 November 2017, so conceivably the Bill could see a thin winter sunlight ahead of Christmas 2017.
Nick Thody, Osborne Clarke (nick.thody@osborneclarke.com)
Some key points from the government's white paper.
The existing customs regime
The UK is a member of the EU customs union and will remain so until Brexit. This means that:
In terms of the legal framework:
What does the UK government want to happen?
The UK government’s position is that the UK will leave the customs union and the single market at Brexit.
The government’s preferred next step after that is for a transitional period, during which there would be a ‘new and time-limited customs union’ between the UK and the EU customs union. This would mean that businesses would only need to adjust to a new UK customs regime once, at the end of the transitional period. That transitional period is currently expected to be ‘around two years’. There would be a shared external tariff and no customs processes and duties between the UK and the EU. After that, the new customs regime would kick in.
None of this has been agreed by, or even (publicly) discussed with, the EU.
What has to happen anyway?
There will be a new Customs Bill.
When the UK leaves the EU at Brexit, all existing EU law will be incorporated into UK law by the Withdrawal Bill. That EU law will then need to be amended so that it ‘works’ and makes sense after Brexit. But the amendment powers under the Withdrawal Bill do not allow revenue raising. Given that, and the complexity of customs legislation, and the need to keep all options open as to what the UK’s future customs, VAT and excise regimes look like in the future, the government has decided to introduce a new Customs Bill to apply after Brexit.
What will the Customs Bill contain?
We don’t know. It hasn’t been published. But as the white paper makes clear, the Bill will allow for all eventualities, including for:
So the Bill will enable the government to create an entirely new and standalone customs, VAT and excise regime that enables the UK to:
Some of those provisions will support the introduction of a new UK trade policy.
The white paper says that ‘in order to provide continuity for business, the customs legislation will mostly be based on the union customs code. The administration of the VAT and excise regimes will remain largely the same as today’.
What might a future customs relationship with the EU look like?
The government set out its ideas on how the future customs relationship with the EU might work (after any transitional period) in a ‘future partnership paper’ in August 2017.
Is the Bill the whole story?
No. Although the Bill is an essential step in establishing a standalone UK customs regime, crucial logistical work is needed to:
Although the white paper has a couple of pages on contingency planning for a hard Brexit, focused on how intense pressure at ro-ro ports could be alleviated, there are few signs that this logistical work has started.
Next steps
We don’t have a publication date for the Bill. The white paper invites comments by 3 November 2017, so conceivably the Bill could see a thin winter sunlight ahead of Christmas 2017.
Nick Thody, Osborne Clarke (nick.thody@osborneclarke.com)