US tarrifs. 10% U.K., 20% EU.

So we were already paying 10% and the EU were paying 20%? Brexit bonus then - I’m surprised the remoaners weren’t moaning about that.

I think denso was making the point that it is the importer who actually pays the tariff, rather than the exporter. These tariff increases don't change that. But it will almost certainly mean that we get to export less to the USA. Although the EU will be hit worse in that respect.
 
The point is we don't pay any tariffs, never have. It's the American importers who pay.
So have they been paying 10% on UK imports and 20% on EU imports then? Since when? And if it’s ’reciprocal' as Trump says, have our importers been paying 10% vs the EU importers paying 20%? Again, since when?
 
So have they been paying 10% on UK imports and 20% on EU imports then? Since when?
It's more complicated than that. We've been using the same tarrifs as the EU to date, these additional taxes on imports will hit us more mildly than the EU.

Brexit probably has finally found a benefit, our products won't be as heavily taxed for consumers in the US compared to EU made goods. This is good, but who knows if it outweighs the **** storm it caused in trading with the 3x larger market next door
 
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So have they been paying 10% on UK imports and 20% on EU imports then? Since when?
You are changing the subject. You claimed it cost us less to export than EU countries. That is just misunderstanding tariffs, neither we, nor the EU pay anything for Trump imposed tariffs.
 
All we used to hear was "loss of tariff free trade" between the EU after Brexit and lauding, nay, rejoicing the EU for imposing tariffs on the UK
WRONG, it was loss of frictionless trade, not loss of tariff free trade.

The EU never imposed tariffs on the UK

Brexit voters like you chose to leave the Single Market and that meant losing frictionless access.
 
WRONG, it was loss of frictionless trade, not loss of tariff free trade.

The EU never imposed tariffs on the UK

Brexit voters like you chose to leave the Single Market and that meant losing frictionless access.

Is that what they used to call "non-tariff trade barriers" during the Brexit negotiations?
 
Is that what they used to call "non-tariff trade barriers" during the Brexit negotiations?
Yes, made up mostly of:

Rules of origin checks
Sanitary and Phytosanitary controls
Transit documents
Customs declarations.

These things can only be removed if regulations are fully aligned, as soon as you have different standards you need checks at external borders

Brexit supporters still don’t understand that 9 years later
 
We have always charged a Tariff, VAT as its otherwise known @20% which is payable on import. Vast swaths of imports do no attract other tariffs.
 
We have always charged a Tariff, VAT as its otherwise known @20% which is payable on import

Economists say VAT is trade neutral, though, because it applies to the domestic competition equally.
 
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