A first step towards rebuilding UK-EU ties - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
欧洲经济

A first step towards rebuilding UK-EU ties

Hard-fought reset lays bare the realities of the post-Brexit relationship

Nine years after the Brexit referendum, the howls of “surrender” from Britain’s political right over the Labour government’s reset with the EU shows how divisive, and cloaked in misinformation, the issue remains. The agreement is not a massive sellout. Neither is it, in sum, a massive deal. It is, though — like the UK’s recent trade pacts with India and the US — a worthwhile step. Its importance is above all symbolic: the first big UK-wide agreement with the EU since Brexit is a recognition that it is in both sides’ interests to work more closely together.

Given the clout of Britain’s military and its defence industry, the centrepiece is rightly a security and defence pact that will formalise co-operation in military training and mobility, cyber and space security, resilience of infrastructure and countering hybrid threats. Subject to signing a third-country agreement, the pact paves the way for the UK to take part in the EU’s €150bn Security Action for Europe procurement fund — an important prize for both sides.

The pressure on Sir Keir Starmer’s government to cut net immigration means it has only reluctantly agreed to work towards a youth mobility scheme enabling 18- to 30-year-olds to travel and work in each others’ countries. Rebadged as a “youth experience” scheme, this would be time-limited and capped in numbers. It is a desirable goal, however, that would reopen important opportunities for young Britons.

The economic component of the reset is more limited. But an agreement to work towards a veterinary deal allowing most UK agrifood exports to the EU to happen without cumbersome border checks and paperwork delivers a Labour manifesto commitment. Combined with linking the two sides’ emissions trading systems, the government estimates this will boost Britain’s economy by nearly £9bn by 2040, even if this offsets only a tiny fraction of the overall hit to the economy from Brexit.

There are, though, notable trade-offs. Britain is accepting “dynamic alignment”, or automatically following evolving EU rules on plant and animal products, with the European Court of Justice acting as final arbiter here on points of EU law. It is giving EU fishing boats access to UK waters for 12 more years — more than double its original offer.

Rightwing opposition parties say Britain is thus becoming a rule-taker, betraying key parts of its post-Brexit “independence” and selling out its fishing industry. Yet the vaunted benefits of regulatory divergence from the EU have mostly proved illusory, and the veterinary deal was worth doing. While fishing looms large in the national psyche, it constitutes, on 2021 figures, a mere 0.03 per cent of national output.

When Europe is having to shoulder much more of its own defensive burden even as Russia poses an ominous threat, it is regrettable that several EU countries chose to make progress in weightier areas such as defence contingent on UK concessions in such a small industry. But the reality is that as soon as it left the EU, especially via Boris Johnson’s bare-bones Brexit deal, Britain became a demandeur in any future attempt to improve its terms. Contrary to Brexiters’ claims, the smaller party in any trade negotiation always needs the bigger one more than vice versa.

Labour arguably wasted some of the post-election goodwill it enjoyed last year in Brussels, through the paucity of its own ambition and its manifesto red lines insisting on no return to the EU single market, customs union or freedom of movement. Its new reset at least attempts to push up to the limits of some of those red lines. Starmer’s government must now use it as the basis for a more ambitious realignment, over time, with what is still Britain’s most important trade and security partner.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

元首关系紧张,美英安全合作出现裂痕

英美围绕伊朗战争出现分歧,正在冲击两国外交人员、官员以及军方人员之间的工作关系。

FT社评:全球贸易保卫战中的“中间力量缺位”

有关取代美国、寻找多边体系之锚的讨论没有得出什么实际成果。

伊朗战争切断天然气供应后亚洲国家纷纷转向煤炭

海湾供应趋紧之际,各国无视环保忧虑,重启并加大使用高污染燃料。

美国豪掷数十亿美元押注尚未验证的稀土企业

在推进这一关键金属布局之际,多家与特朗普政府相关人士存在财务联系的公司拿到了大额融资支持。

困境债基金瞄准私募信贷低迷

私募信贷承压之际,投资者预计将迎来自2008年以来的最大机遇。

战争打乱消费品巨头的降价计划

通胀再度飙升的阴影逼近,让本已举步维艰的消费品企业面临艰难抉择。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×