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Would staying in a customs union after Brexit avoid a hard border with Ireland?

(opens in a new window)Gavin Barrett, (opens in a new window)University College Dublin
Posted March 01, 2018(opens in a new window)

Apart from being a week in which Siberian snowstorms blanketed Europe, the last days of February 2018 will be remembered as the moment the Irish border question marched firmly back onto centre stage in the Brexit debate in three rapid steps.


Roaming free. The current Irish border. Mark Marlow/PA Wire

The first step came on February 26, when Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn – in a shrewd political move – called for the UK to (opens in a new window)enter a permanent customs union with the EU after Brexit. Corbyn thus returned to the political agenda an issue the British prime minister, Theresa May, had (opens in a new window)tried to erase unequivocally only weeks before. Corbyn’s reasons were “to ensure that there are no tariffs with Europe and to help avoid any need for a hard border in Northern Ireland”. Parliamentary numbers give him every chance of prevailing.

Then a (opens in a new window)letter emerged from the foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, to May. In it, Johnson – who had repeatedly denied in public any threat of a hard Northern Ireland border – turned out to be contemplating precisely this eventuality in private. This discovery – (opens in a new window)deemed “the most remarkable revelation of duplicity” by Conservative peer Michael Heseltine – also indicated the price that Tory Brexiters now seem increasingly prepared to see paid for Brexit: a hard Northern Irish border, whatever consequences this may involve for peace or the future of Ireland.

Step three followed the day after, when the European Commission unveiled its (opens in a new window)Draft Withdrawal Agreement for the UK’s departure from the EU. Among its provisions were stipulations that – if other agreements were not reached to avoid a hard border – Northern Ireland would form part of the EU customs territory. This would be accompanied by the establishment of “common regulatory area on the island of Ireland”, in a wide variety of subject areas.


Read more: (opens in a new window)EU Brexit withdrawal proposal: a lawyer explains the detail


The idea of treating Northern Ireland differently was (opens in a new window)speedily denounced by May. But her insistence that a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland can somehow be avoided remains unsupported by any concrete plan as to how this might be done without following the route suggested in the draft withdrawal agreement – which (opens in a new window)is supported by the Irish government.

What a customs union would mean

In both a no-deal scenario or May’s preferred scenario of a new comprehensive free trade deal between the EU and UK (like (opens in a new window)Canada’s), a hard border – complete with customs checks on both sides, queues and tariffs and political fury in border counties – is guaranteed. If the UK were to leave the EU without a deal, World Trade Organisation tariffs would apply on trade on all goods between the UK and the Republic of Ireland. For that, customs controls would be needed. But a Canada-style deal would (opens in a new window)clearly also require checks on the border – however much May denies this. Free trade areas always require border controls – because even though goods in a free trade area would be traded tariff-free, goods coming from outside the free trade area would not be.

What about Corbyn’s plan to place the UK in (opens in a new window)a permanent customs union with the EU? This would certainly eliminate the need for customs controls to collect tariffs – as a customs union would eliminate tariffs on all goods crossing internal frontiers. But it would not eliminate customs controls entirely. This can be seen from the fact that between 1973 and 1992, the UK and Ireland were in a Corbyn-style customs union with each other (called the European Economic Community) and (opens in a new window)yet customs controls were maintained.

Member states of a customs union can maintain all sorts of regulations – such as health standards, agricultural controls and minimum product standards – and goods entering the market need to be checked for compliance with these. This is exactly what customs officers along the Northern Irish border were doing until the single market emerged in 1993.

Only in a single market are such standards harmonised or mutually recognised on a comprehensive basis – without the need for customs checks. This is why it was possible to abolish systematic customs checks along the border in 1993.

How to avoid a hard border

Corbyn’s proposal, if the EU agreed to it, would reduce customs checks along the frontier and be a hugely welcome boost to cross-border trade and to the prosperity of both the UK and Ireland. It is also infinitely preferable to the May-Johnson free trade area plan. What it will not do, however, is end the prospect of a hard border.

For this, both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland need to be in a single market with one another. One way of doing this is for the UK as a whole, in leaving the EU, to stay in a single market and customs union relationship with the EU 27 states – what could be called a “Norway plus” deal. Another is the fall-back option within the EU’s draft withdrawal agreement – that Northern Ireland remains part of the current EU customs territory after Brexit.

May currently rejects both options. The economic consequences of that for the UK as a whole seem (opens in a new window)dubious. But, at any rate, as long as both courses are ruled out, May’s “no hard border” mantra should be recognised for the self-deluding fantasy that Johnson’s letter implies it is.

(opens in a new window)Gavin Barrett, Professor at the Sutherland School of Law, (opens in a new window)University College Dublin

This article was originally published on (opens in a new window)The Conversation. Read the (opens in a new window)original article.

The Conversation