‘Hard Border’ inevitable if Britain leaves customs union, MPs told

Committee hears predictions of physical infrastructure and vehicle spot checks along North Border

Border Communities against Brexit signage on the outskirts of Newry. Photograph Nick Bradshaw
Border Communities against Brexit signage on the outskirts of Newry. Photograph Nick Bradshaw

A hard Border with physical infrastructure and spot checks on vehicles is inevitable if Britain leaves the EU customs union, MPs have heard.

Paul Mac Flynn, senior economist at the Nevin Economic Research Institute, told the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee at Westminster that Britain faced a clear choice about the border.

“Leaving the customs union is a perfectly legitimate aim if the UK wants to pursue an independent trade policy. That’s fine, but then don’t turn around when you get to the land border in Ireland and say, where are the flexible solutions?” he said.

“I think it has to come down to this. If you are leaving the customs union, that has an implication for what the Border in Northern Ireland is going to look like. It’s clear that one is being sacrificed for the other, at least be honest about it.”

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Theresa May repeated in the House of Commons on Wednesday that Britain will leave the customs union and the single market when it leaves the European Union.

In her speech in Florence last month, the prime minister ruled out any “physical infrastructure” on the Border.

But Sylvia de Mars, a lecturer in EU law at Newcastle Law School, told the committee that such a claim was misleading.

“We’re going to have infrastructure. It does not necessarily have to be at the Border but there will have to be, for instance, depots where things are checked, where spot checks can take place to make sure that all the products that are crossing the Border meet the EU’s internal regulatory standards,” she said.

Mr Mac Flynn said although technology could streamline customs clearance procedures, it could not eliminate the need for checks. “It’s like when people say we’re going to have electronic customs declarations and that’s going to remove a lot of bureaucracy for businesses. That’s fine. But borders are there for the people who are not filling in the forms.

“There’s no way you can tell by looking at somebody’s face whether they’ve filled in their customs declaration or not,” Mr Mac Flynn said.

He pointed out that, although advanced technology is used on the border between Norway and Sweden, officials still make spot checks to ensure that electronic customs declarations are accurate. And he said the current regime on excise at the Irish border was seriously inadequate and porous.

“If you look at the way the current Border manages differences in excise rates, there’s no way the EU is going to allow its customs frontier to be as ill-policed as the excise border is between Northern Ireland and the Republic,” he said.

Katy Hayward, lecturer in Sociology at Queen's University Belfast, told the committee that Brexit was already having an adverse effect on economic development along the Border.

“What we’ve already seen is a re-emergence of what happened in the past and caused great damage to the economy in the Border region in particular but also more widely in Northern Ireland, and that is back-to-back development, with businesses in Northern Ireland, including the Border region, facing London, facing into the UK and businesses on the south of the Border facing down towards Dublin. And this has created a deficit of development in the Border region,” she said.

Denis Staunton

Denis Staunton

Denis Staunton is China Correspondent of The Irish Times