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Nonsense.
The UK has left the EU on January 31st, 2020 and the transition period ended on December 31st, 2020. The UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) was signed on December 24th, 20201. The rules of origin requirements are some of the most important provisions that your business needs to understand and meet under the UK’s deal with the EU2. To qualify for preferential tariff treatment under the TCA, businesses must demonstrate the origin of goods traded with the European Union (EU). If goods do not match the origin standards, they will not be eligible for preferential treatment and will be subject to customs taxes (tariffs)1. Typically, for preferential origin, around 50%+ of value has to be added to claim origin. Post-Brexit, what was once European value-added will have to be separated into UK and EU value-added. That will make it harder to reach the threshold to export to the EU without tariffs1. UK companies exporting into the EU will not have to complete paperwork certifying that their goods are locally made until 2022, reducing the burden of red tape facing many industries
N.I. Protocol...
he UK has left the EU on January 31st, 2020 and the transition period ended on December 31st, 2020. The UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) was signed on December 24th, 20201. The rules of origin requirements are some of the most important provisions that your business needs to understand and meet under the UK’s deal with the EU2. To qualify for preferential tariff treatment under the TCA, businesses must demonstrate the origin of goods traded with the European Union (EU). If goods do not match the origin standards, they will not be eligible for preferential treatment and will be subject to customs taxes (tariffs)1. Typically, for preferential origin, around 50%+ of value has to be added to claim origin. Post-Brexit, what was once European value-added will have to be separated into UK and EU value-added. That will make it harder to reach the threshold to export to the EU without tariffs1. UK companies exporting into the EU will not have to complete paperwork certifying that their goods are locally made until 2022, reducing the burden of red tape facing many industries1.
Thankfully a hard Brexit never happened.
Now they will blame the nasty EU for not giving them a good deal, then try to sell some pork to the other side of the world.