Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Trade Deal, or No Deal...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostNo less disheartening, or heartbreaking, for being so entirely predictable...
Most of the press through December played up the Deal (good) No Deal (Bad) scenario, whilst Johnson and others boasted about how UK would prosper "under WHO terms" with No Deal....
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Last year I bought a digital piano as a birthday present from the EU. Now I'm looking for a similar one, but trying to compare suppliers and models is now harder thanks to - well - you know what. One potential supplier suggests taking their price - without VAT and adding in 20-25%. There are likely to be "brokerage charges" around £12 plus duty fees - maybe 2-3% of the value (before or after VAT?) plus the additional complication of having to pay some of the "unknown" charges before delivery, which I suspect will inevitably cause further delay.
Alternatively I might be able to find a supplier in the UK, but it's all quite a lot of extra work trying do decide. Barriers to trade - definitely.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostLast year I bought a digital piano as a birthday present from the EU. Now I'm looking for a similar one, but trying to compare suppliers and models is now harder thanks to - well - you know what. One potential supplier suggests taking their price - without VAT and adding in 20-25%. There are likely to be "brokerage charges" around £12 plus duty fees - maybe 2-3% of the value (before or after VAT?) plus the additional complication of having to pay some of the "unknown" charges before delivery, which I suspect will inevitably cause further delay.
Alternatively I might be able to find a supplier in the UK, but it's all quite a lot of extra work trying do decide. Barriers to trade - definitely.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostLast year I bought a digital piano as a birthday present from the EU. Now I'm looking for a similar one, but trying to compare suppliers and models is now harder thanks to - well - you know what. One potential supplier suggests taking their price - without VAT and adding in 20-25%. There are likely to be "brokerage charges" around £12 plus duty fees - maybe 2-3% of the value (before or after VAT?) plus the additional complication of having to pay some of the "unknown" charges before delivery, which I suspect will inevitably cause further delay.
Alternatively I might be able to find a supplier in the UK, but it's all quite a lot of extra work trying do decide. Barriers to trade - definitely.
Buy in UK! Unless you’re in a hurry it is probably advisable to see how the tariff and paperwork problems settle.
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Something else that should have been on the radar and already thought about
Patrick Murfet says he tried to import bees via Northern Ireland but was told they would be destroyed
I wonder what the full story is here; something doesn't quite add up.
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Unless something changes in UK/EU relationship in near term future I suspect much of the fishing and agri-industry (breeding, meat etc) together with associated industries will be lost - the EU can replace most from within its own borders and as demonstrated with the vaccine will actually be hostile rather than neutral towards the UK - I await the deal over the finance industry still to be agreed as here those affected have a much greater tie in to the Tories and I suspect EU hostility especially from France and Germany which look to taking over the London trade will be strong.
The situation in Northern Ireland seems to be reaching a slow boil over - the trade barrier in the Irish sea was a stupidity and was ditched by the EU itself for selfish interests last week.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostSomething else that should have been on the radar and already thought about
Patrick Murfet says he tried to import bees via Northern Ireland but was told they would be destroyed
I wonder what the full story is here; something doesn't quite add up.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...eding-industry
Farmers ‘relieved’ as chemical sanctioned for emergency use, despite EU prohibition backed by UK on using it outoors
....bad and getting worse in so many ways........but the tory press from Telegraph to Express will always seize on EU mistakes or isolated UK positives to sweep everything else off the front page...
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Patrick Murfet’s Italian bees could be facing further extinction threats–with calls for the reintroduction of neonicotinoids which were banned by the EU. https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/563943. (There’s another major petition against reintroduction).
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostThe situation in Northern Ireland seems to be reaching a slow boil over - the trade barrier in the Irish sea was a stupidity and was ditched by the EU itself for selfish interests last week.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostI await the deal over the finance industry still to be agreed as here those affected have a much greater tie in to the Tories and I suspect EU hostility especially from France and Germany which look to taking over the London trade will be strong.
...Now where did I put my Irish granny's birth certificate ?
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI'm at a loss to be able to think of a solution. Basically, the Unionists don't want a border between the ROI and NI, nor do they want a border checks between NI and the UK mainland. The bee situation sounds dire, but trying to import Italian bees into the mainland, from the EU across the 'soft border' with NI, is exactly what the protocol was NOT about. And it is what the EU suspected was happening with the vaccine.
I don't know how much 'agitating' the bee business may have done, if any, about post-Brexit issues, but what is becoming increasingly and depressingly clear is that it probably wouldn't have made any difference. The Scottish seafood producers(not to be lumped with fishermen in the "you voted for it" chant as they didn't) knew that the Kent lorry queues and vet inspections would be a stumbling block, and kept raising it. There was a fudge made for the queues issue but the vet inspections chaos wasn't addressed - due in no small part to the fundamental problem of not having enough bodies to do the checks in the first place. Willful ignorance of the functioning of the agriculture sector, and the way food stuffs are produced and traded, isn't the best way to feed a country and contribute to the economy in normal times, but becomes impossible faced with challenges such as Covid and Brexit.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostRelocations to Dublin have gathered pace over the last 4 years...
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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