Repair UK-EU Trading Relationship
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Repair UK-EU Trading Relationship” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Public finances & the next generation — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
By reducing trade barriers with the EU, this policy could raise UK productivity and GDP, which would boost tax revenues and improve the long-run sustainability of public finances. The main caveat is that the most ambitious element — rejoining the Single Market — depends on complex negotiations whose outcome is uncertain.
The evidence
- The policy aims for veterinary/SPS agreements, mutual recognition agreements, and ultimately Single Market membership to reduce trade friction. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “negotiating comprehensive veterinary and plant health agreements, mutual recognition agreements, and ultimately aiming to join the Single Market”
- The OBR estimates Brexit's current trading arrangement will reduce long-run UK productivity by 4% relative to EU membership. — obr.uk (institutional) — “The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates that the post-Brexit trading relationship will reduce long-run UK productivity by 4% relative to remaining in the EU”
- Brexit trade costs increased by around 11% on both exports and imports due to non-tariff barriers under the TCA. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “The Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) increased trade costs (non-tariff barriers) by an estimated 10.8% for exports to the EU and 11.0% for imports from the EU”
- UK government analysis suggests rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current TCA. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “UK Government analysis suggests rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current Trade and Cooperation Agreement”
- Bloomberg Economics estimates that nearly half of forgone output since Brexit could be recovered by improving trade with the EU. — financialpost.com (media) — “Bloomberg Economics estimates that nearly half of the 2% to 4% of forgone economic output since Brexit could be recovered by improving trade with the bloc”
- Rejoining the Single Market would require accepting EU rules and the four freedoms including free movement of people. — chronicle.gi (media) — “Rejoining would necessitate the UK adopting EU rules and regulations, and accepting the "four freedoms," including the free movement of people, goods, services, and capital”
- The EU's former chief negotiator has stated the UK cannot cherry-pick benefits without accepting full obligations. — chronicle.gi (media) — “Michel Barnier, the EU's former chief negotiator, has consistently stated that the UK cannot "cherry-pick" benefits without accepting the full obligations”
Biggest unknown: Whether the EU will agree to an SPS deal, MRAs, and especially Single Market re-entry on terms the UK accepts, since the EU has stated the four freedoms are indivisible and cannot be cherry-picked.
Our reading: O12 is about debt-path sustainability and whether growth or borrowing finances public spending. This policy contains no direct spending commitments or tax changes, so its fiscal impact flows entirely through the GDP/productivity channel: higher economic output raises tax revenues, eases the debt-to-GDP ratio, and reduces pressure for borrowing to fund public services. The OBR's estimate of a 4% long-run productivity hit from Brexit is the key measurable baseline. A policy that partially reverses this — through SPS agreements reducing agri-food trade costs, MRAs eliminating costly dual-certification, and potentially Single Market re-entry — would mechanically improve the fiscal position by raising the tax base. Government analysis cited by the Resolution Foundation puts Single Market re-entry at +3.5% GDP relative to the TCA; even partial steps (SPS, MRAs) would capture a fraction of that. These are supply-side gains that compound over time, making the long-term time horizon appropriate. Critically, this policy does not involve unfunded spending or tax cuts — the standard routes to O12 harm. If anything, trade liberalisation is fiscally positive: it raises revenues without adding expenditure. The magnitude is moderate rather than major because (a) the most ambitious step — Single Market membership — faces a genuine negotiating obstacle (the EU's insistence on the four freedoms, including free movement, which conflicts with many UK parties' stated red lines), and (b) intermediate steps (SPS, MRAs) deliver real but smaller gains. The main uncertainty is whether negotiations succeed. If only SPS and MRA agreements are reached, the fiscal gain is real but modest. Full Single Market re-entry would be the larger prize but is politically and diplomatically contested. There is no credible mechanism by which this policy worsens O12 — it neither borrows nor cuts taxes unfundedly — so the direction is improves, with confidence moderated by negotiation uncertainty.
Prosperity & living standards — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Repairing the UK-EU trading relationship — through veterinary agreements, mutual recognition deals, and ultimately Single Market membership — is backed by strong institutional evidence that it would meaningfully raise productivity and living standards, though the biggest gains depend on steps (like Single Market entry) that face significant political obstacles. Near-term gains from an SPS or MRA deal would be real but smaller; the full uplift would take years to materialise.
The evidence
- The post-Brexit trading arrangement is estimated by the OBR to reduce long-run UK productivity by 4% relative to remaining in the EU, with exports and imports both around 15% lower in the long run. — obr.uk (institutional) — “The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates that the post-Brexit trading relationship will reduce long-run UK productivity by 4% relative to remaining in the EU and that both exports and imports will be approxim…”
- Trade costs under the TCA increased by around 10.8% for UK exports to the EU and 11.0% for imports. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “The Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) increased trade costs (non-tariff barriers) by an estimated 10.8% for exports to the EU and 11.0% for imports from the EU”
- Brexit contributed to an average annual increase of £870 in living costs per household and a decline in business investment. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “Brexit contributed to an average annual increase of £870 in living costs per household and a decline in business investment”
- Approximately 20,000 small firms ceased exporting goods to the EU entirely under the TCA. — personal.lse.ac.uk (academic) — “Approximately 20,000 small firms reportedly ceased exporting goods to the EU entirely under the TCA”
- An SPS agreement would significantly reduce checks, costs, and friction on agri-food trade, including eliminating Export Health Certificates costing up to £200 per consignment. — consult.defra.gov.uk (government) — “eliminating the need for Export Health Certificates (which can cost up to £200 per consignment) and routine border checks on products like dairy, fish, eggs, and red meat, leading to savings for businesses”
- Mutual recognition agreements would eliminate an estimated £127–171 million in annual dual-testing costs, particularly in pharmaceuticals. — thamesvalleychamber.co.uk (media) — “The annual costs of dual testing systems, particularly in pharmaceuticals, are estimated between £127 million and £171 million (2025), which MRAs would eliminate”
- UK government analysis suggests rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current TCA. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “UK Government analysis suggests rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current Trade and Cooperation Agreement”
- Bloomberg Economics estimates that nearly half of the 2–4% of forgone economic output since Brexit could be recovered by improving trade with the EU, with deeper Single Market access for goods being the largest plausible boost. — financialpost.com (media) — “Bloomberg Economics estimates that nearly half of the 2% to 4% of forgone economic output since Brexit could be recovered by improving trade with the bloc, with deeper access to the Single Market for goods being the larg…”
- There is broad institutional consensus that Single Market membership offers the greatest economic advantages and reduction in trade barriers compared to the current arrangement. — obr.uk (institutional) — “There is broad consensus among institutions like the OBR, Resolution Foundation, and the London School of Economics that Single Market membership offers the greatest economic advantages and reduction in trade barriers co…”
- The EU's former chief negotiator has stated the UK cannot cherry-pick benefits without accepting the four freedoms and EU sovereignty over rules. — chronicle.gi (media) — “Michel Barnier, the EU's former chief negotiator, has consistently stated that the UK cannot "cherry-pick" benefits without accepting the full obligations, including the indivisibility of the "four freedoms" and EU sover…”
Biggest unknown: Whether the EU will agree to the most ambitious elements (SPS agreement, MRAs, Single Market access) on terms the UK will accept, given the EU's stated position that the four freedoms are indivisible and cannot be cherry-picked.
Our reading: The evidence base for this verdict is unusually strong and consistent in direction. The OBR's own modelling shows the current post-Brexit arrangement suppresses long-run UK productivity by 4% and trade volumes by ~15% — a large, evidence-grounded drag on living standards and business investment. Resolution Foundation data show a direct household living-cost hit of £870/year. These are the counterfactual baselines against which this policy's gains should be measured. The policy operates in three tiers of ambition, each with distinct near-term and long-term effects. First, an SPS/veterinary agreement would remove Export Health Certificates (up to £200/consignment), reduce border friction, and partially reverse the 37% decline in British farm product sales to the EU — real, measurable gains for agri-food businesses and supply chain efficiency. Second, MRAs would eliminate £127–171m/year in duplicate pharmaceutical testing and improve investment confidence in R&D-intensive sectors. Third, Single Market membership, if achieved, could recover roughly half of the 2–4% output loss since Brexit per Bloomberg Economics, and ~3.5% GDP relative to the TCA per government analysis. The direction is clearly 'improves' for O13: the policy targets the exact mechanisms that independent institutional analysis identifies as responsible for current productivity and investment losses. The near-term gains (SPS, MRAs) are modest but real; the long-term gains from deeper integration are substantial if achieved. Magnitude is 'moderate' rather than 'major' because the most economically significant step — Single Market membership — is highly uncertain. The EU's position that the four freedoms are indivisible creates a genuine negotiating obstacle, and the full productivity uplift would take years to materialise even if agreed. Near-term deliverables (SPS, MRAs) are meaningful but smaller in macro scale. One dissenting view (Lilley, E32) questions historical Single Market benefits for UK goods exports, but this is a single contrarian voice against OBR, Resolution Foundation, LSE, and Bloomberg — it cannot overturn the weight of institutional evidence.
Cost of living — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy aims to reduce trade barriers with the EU, which evidence suggests could lower food prices and business costs for ordinary households. The biggest uncertainty is whether the EU will agree to the terms sought, especially Single Market membership, which comes with significant political conditions.
The evidence
- Brexit-related trade friction increased trade costs by around 11% for both exports and imports. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “The Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) increased trade costs (non-tariff barriers) by an estimated 10.8% for exports to the EU and 11.0% for imports from the EU”
- Brexit contributed to an average annual increase of £870 in living costs per household. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “Brexit contributed to an average annual increase of £870 in living costs per household and a decline in business investment”
- UK food prices rose 25% compared to an estimated 17% had the UK remained in the EU, with per-household agri-food divergence costs estimated at £250. — bestforbritain.org (media) — “the per-household cost of the UK diverging from EU agri-food standards at £250, contributing to food price inflation where UK food prices rose by 25% (compared to an estimated 17% had the UK remained in the EU)”
- An SPS agreement could ease pressure on consumer food price inflation. — consult.defra.gov.uk (government) — “An SPS agreement could ease pressure on consumer food price inflation”
- An SPS agreement would eliminate Export Health Certificates costing up to £200 per consignment and routine border checks, saving businesses money. — consult.defra.gov.uk (government) — “eliminating the need for Export Health Certificates (which can cost up to £200 per consignment) and routine border checks on products like dairy, fish, eggs, and red meat, leading to savings for businesses”
- Rejoining the Single Market is estimated to boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current TCA. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current Trade and Cooperation Agreement”
- Single Market membership would remove both tariff and non-tariff barriers, potentially lowering prices for consumers. — theguardian.com (media) — “Membership would provide totally free trade with the EU, removing both tariff and non-tariff barriers to goods and services trade, leading to lower costs for businesses and potentially lower prices for consumers”
- Rejoining the Single Market requires accepting EU rules and the four freedoms including free movement of people. — chronicle.gi (media) — “Rejoining would necessitate the UK adopting EU rules and regulations, and accepting the "four freedoms," including the free movement of people, goods, services, and capital”
Biggest unknown: Whether the EU will negotiate the agreements on terms acceptable to the UK — especially Single Market access, which requires accepting free movement and EU rules.
Our reading: The evidence consistently shows that Brexit-era trade friction has raised costs for UK households — through higher food prices, export health certificate costs, and broader cost-of-living impacts estimated at £870 per household annually. An SPS/veterinary agreement, the first step in this policy, is projected to directly reduce these costs by eliminating export health certificates and border checks on agri-food products, easing food price inflation. Mutual recognition agreements would cut dual-testing costs (estimated £127–171m annually in pharmaceuticals alone), potentially feeding through to consumer prices over time. Single Market membership, the policy's ultimate goal, carries the largest projected economic benefit (OBR: 4% productivity gain; RF: 3.5% GDP boost), and broad institutional consensus supports its cost-of-living benefits via lower prices and higher real incomes. The policy therefore has a plausible and evidence-backed pathway to improving cost of living for ordinary households, particularly lower-income ones who spend proportionally more on food and essentials. The main caveats are: (1) the stepped nature of this policy means near-term gains are modest (SPS/MRAs), with the largest gains conditional on Single Market accession which is politically uncertain and requires accepting free movement; (2) the evidence on Single Market benefits, while broad in consensus, is contested by some analysts; (3) timelines for negotiation are long, so impacts are felt over the long run rather than immediately. On balance, the direction is 'improves' — the evidence leans clearly toward cost-of-living benefits — but magnitude is moderate rather than major because the full gains are conditional on the most politically contentious step (Single Market membership) being achieved.
Good work & fair pay — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Repairing UK-EU trade ties — especially through a veterinary agreement and mutual recognition deals — would reduce costs and open markets for farmers, agri-food workers, and export-facing industries, supporting jobs and pay. But the biggest gains depend on whether the EU agrees to terms, which is uncertain.
The evidence
- British farm product sales to the EU fell by 37% between 2019 and 2024. — bestforbritain.org (media) — “British farm product sales to the EU declined by 37% between 2019 and 2024”
- Around 20,000 small firms reportedly stopped exporting goods to the EU entirely under the Trade and Cooperation Agreement. — personal.lse.ac.uk (academic) — “Approximately 20,000 small firms reportedly ceased exporting goods to the EU entirely under the TCA”
- Non-tariff barriers increased trade costs by around 11% for both exports and imports with the EU. — economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “The Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) increased trade costs (non-tariff barriers) by an estimated 10.8% for exports to the EU and 11.0% for imports from the EU”
- An SPS agreement would eliminate Export Health Certificates costing up to £200 per consignment and remove routine border checks, cutting costs for agri-food businesses. — consult.defra.gov.uk (government) — “eliminating the need for Export Health Certificates (which can cost up to £200 per consignment) and routine border checks on products like dairy, fish, eggs, and red meat, leading to savings for businesses”
- An SPS agreement would unlock new markets for products like fresh sausages, shellfish, and seed potatoes that currently face significant barriers. — consult.defra.gov.uk (government) — “New markets would be unlocked for products such as fresh sausages, burgers, certain shellfish, and seed potatoes, which currently face significant barriers”
- Mutual recognition agreements would eliminate annual dual-testing costs estimated at £127–171 million in pharmaceuticals, supporting jobs and investment in that sector. — thamesvalleychamber.co.uk (media) — “The annual costs of dual testing systems, particularly in pharmaceuticals, are estimated between £127 million and £171 million (2025), which MRAs would eliminate”
- Rejoining the Single Market could boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current TCA, with broad institutional consensus on its economic benefits. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “UK Government analysis suggests rejoining the Single Market would boost GDP by approximately 3.5% relative to the current Trade and Cooperation Agreement”
- The EU's position is that the UK cannot cherry-pick benefits without accepting all four freedoms, making comprehensive agreements harder to negotiate. — chronicle.gi (media) — “Michel Barnier, the EU's former chief negotiator, has consistently stated that the UK cannot "cherry-pick" benefits without accepting the full obligations, including the indivisibility of the "four freedoms" and EU sover…”
Biggest unknown: Whether the EU will negotiate the agreements on terms acceptable to the UK, given its stated position that the 'four freedoms' are indivisible and the UK cannot cherry-pick benefits.
Our reading: The evidence paints a clear picture of significant post-Brexit damage to work and earnings in trade-exposed sectors. A 37% fall in farm exports to the EU and the exit of 20,000 small exporters represent direct job and income losses for workers in agri-food and related supply chains. Non-tariff barriers raised trade costs by roughly 11%, squeezing margins and wages in export industries. The policy's staged approach — SPS agreement first, then MRAs, then Single Market — would progressively address these harms. An SPS agreement would cut per-consignment costs of up to £200, remove routine border checks, and re-open markets for currently banned products, directly improving the viability and employment conditions of farming and food businesses. MRAs would eliminate £127–171 million in annual dual-testing costs in pharmaceuticals, supporting high-quality jobs in that sector. Single Market membership would be the largest gain — government analysis projects a 3.5% GDP boost — which would over time feed into employment and real wages broadly. The direction is therefore 'improves', and the magnitude is moderate rather than major because: (a) the stepwise nature means gains accumulate slowly; (b) the EU's stated position makes full Single Market access genuinely uncertain; and (c) some regulatory alignment costs (e.g. reduced pesticide flexibility) could marginally constrain certain agricultural practices. Confidence is moderate because the measurable baseline evidence is strong, but the projected gains depend on negotiating outcomes that are not guaranteed.