catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,767
Yes, it drastically underestimates the impact as it doesn't include frictional costs.That estimate was bollocks - it was based on an extrapolation of a round sum estimate of the cost of doing a single customs declaration. £20bn is roughly equivalent to half a million people being employed full-time doing customs declarations.![]()
At an Business Conference organised by the Financial Times, Juergen Maier
(UK chief executive of Siemens), said it was “complete nonsense” to suggest that new customs procedures were not going to add new frictions to UK trade with the EU.
Indeed, he said that a high-friction model, such as max fac, would have higher costs than the £20bn because “it does not include the cost of delays” and other impediments to business, which he used to deal with before the single market was created.
HMRC officials took the figures from external studies, where clients have to fill in forms describing the proof of origin of the product; whether there are any trade preferences that apply to the product; whether the company has the correct licences to send the product; the value of the product and an exact description of it.*Completing the declaration is a legal necessity.