Ambition Issue 46 (May/June 2021)

Page 38

Columnist

Marta Gajewska, International Trade and Customs Advisor at NI Chamber

The Evolving Implications of Post-Brexit Trade

dates are summarised below: Movement Dates 2021 1–14 January 14–31 January 1–28 February 1–31 March 1–30 April

SDI Completion Dates 2021 01 May 14 May 01 June 28 June 28 June

Other updates include the continuation of the Scheme for Temporary Agri-Food Movements to NI (STAMNI) until at least 1 October 2021. This means that Authorised Traders will be able to move products of animal origin, composite products, food and feed of non-animal origin and plants and plant products from GB to NI without the need for official certification.

Marta Gajewska, International Trade and Customs Advisor at NI Chamber, provides an update to businesses importing from GB and looks ahead to progress with trade agreements which should help NI businesses seeking to scale up on post-Brexit trade.

T

he practical implications of trading post-Brexit continue to evolve, with a new way of trading slowly emerging for NI businesses. Trade processes between GB and NI are dynamic and the business community, along with wider stakeholders, are proving resilient in sourcing solutions to the challenges faced. NI companies are actively and continuously seeking to understand the new regulations and are keen to expand their knowledge to ease administrative obstacles and trade without unnecessary disruption. We observe this first-hand at NI Chamber, as businesses continue to attend our international collaborative forum events, engage with our Customs Advisors and participate in our technical, international training courses to top up their knowledge and apply it to their businesses. There are a number of new and continuing government programs designed to assist business adapting to the new GB trading relationship. This includes HMRC’s £2,000 Brexit Support Fund for SMEs to access advice and training. More information can be found at gov.uk/guidance/. The NI Customs and Trade Academy, which supports the Trader Support Service (TSS), has a number of useful checklists for companies to use when filling out the new documentation required. A recent addition is the checklist to support the creation of a Goods Movement Reference (GMR). This process is completed on the Goods Vehicle Movement Service (GVMS) and is key for goods moving from GB to NI. You can access this at nicustomstradeacademy.co.uk. As the TSS continues to support NI businesses with GBNI declarations, they are developing their service to meet the prevailing business challenges. Early April saw TSS enable registered users to access its Duty Deferment Account (DDA). Payments for goods (duty/VAT/excise) will be calculated during the Supplementary Declaration stage of the three stage TSS process. At this point traders will be able to settle payments using the DDA. This means that at the point of payment to TSS, the associated duty will be passed on to HMRC. Large businesses (more than 250 employees) will only be able to use TSS DDA until 1 July 2021. Small and medium size businesses (less than 250 employees) will be able to use this indefinitely. A new timescale was released by HMRC in mid-April for the completion of supplementary declarations. HMRC usually require that these declarations are completed by the fifth working day of the month after goods move. However, HMRC note that businesses making declarations for the first time need extra time to do so. The updated completion

Trading with the Rest of the World In terms of export trade outside of the EU, NI is part of the UK Free Trade Agreements currently being negotiated. The Department for International Trade (DIT) predict that 80% of UK trade will be covered by FTAs within 3 years, including trade with the EU. Currently, 67 Continuity Trade Agreements have been signed (extending those previously held through the EU). These potential export markets will play an important part in NI’s recovery from COVID-19. The updated list of FTAs currently finalised can be accessed at www.gov.uk/guidance/. The UK has also submitted a formal application to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), which covers 11 countries around the Pacific Rim such as Canada, Vietnam, New Zealand, Australia and Japan. Such an agreement will step beyond the provisions of an FTA and cover additional areas such as food safety regulations, transfer of data, movement of people and more favourable tariffs. This is an expanding agreement with other countries such as Korea, the Philippines and Taiwan tipped to join. To further support NI businesses to trade internationally, DIT has announced the introduction of a new trade and investment hub in Belfast. This will give businesses direct access to export and investment specialists who can provide support and advice on entering new overseas markets as well as invaluable research resources. NI businesses hold a unique position through the NI Protocol and, in time, should be able to derive benefit from the ability to access both GB and EU markets directly, as well as the rest of the world through UK FTAs. In February 2021, it was reported that post-Brexit trade between ROI and NI has increased significantly, with imports from NI into Republic of Ireland (ROI) almost doubling (+95%) on the same period in 2020, whilst imports from GB were down by 53% (source: ROI Central Statistics Office). Further, exports from ROI to NI were up by 38%, whilst exports to GB were down 11%, with food and live animals seeing the biggest fall. This is despite the UK government delaying the introduction of its full customs code until next year. This is potentially an early indication that remaining within the EU customs territory for goods has opened the NI economy up as a user-friendly route from which EU countries can source products. Hopefully, this demonstrates the future potential for our businesses and the NI economy as we transition through 2021 to a different way of trading.

36


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Articles inside

Jim Fitzpatrick

3min
pages 98-100

Dine & Wine - Chris Rees

4min
page 97

Belfast Office Payescape Announces New Partnership with UKG

6min
pages 93-95

Business Class Motoring

7min
pages 90-92

John Ferris

4min
pages 88-89

Openreach to Create 100 New Apprentice Roles

2min
pages 86-87

Best in Class

9min
pages 76-79

Richard Kirk

4min
pages 82-83

Empowering our Local

5min
pages 80-81

John Ryan

10min
pages 70-75

John Campbell

4min
pages 68-69

Leading by Example

5min
pages 64-67

The Test of Time

6min
pages 48-51

Going for Growth

4min
pages 60-61

Laura Gillespie

4min
pages 62-63

The Post-Pandemic Fit Out

6min
pages 44-47

A Cleaner Future

9min
pages 56-59

Constructive Law

6min
pages 52-55

Set for Action on Climate Change

5min
pages 40-43

Squaring Up NI’s Circular

4min
page 39

Marta Gajewska

4min
page 38

QES Survey

6min
pages 36-37

Why Quality and Quantity Matter

4min
pages 30-31

Niall Devlin

3min
page 28

NI Chamber in Conversation With

6min
pages 34-35

Encirc is New Chamber Patron

2min
pages 32-33

CEO Update

3min
page 29

Michael Jennings

2min
pages 26-27

My Ambition is to

3min
pages 14-15

Campaign BT Announces Refurbishment of

2min
pages 10-11

Stairway to Seven

3min
pages 20-21

Holiday at Home Tourism

3min
pages 8-9

Jane Shaw

4min
pages 12-13

A World of Opportunity

6min
pages 22-25

Kate Marshall

4min
pages 18-19

Bill Roy

4min
pages 16-17
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