Brexit to cost logistics £240m

London, UK: A no-deal Brexit would add more than £240m to the industry’s annual bills, thanks to the imposition of tariffs on new vehicles, parts and equipment, warns Logistics UK.

The WTO tariff on new truck sales in the UK, most of which are imported from the EU, is an estimated at £7,000 a truck and with around 48,500 trucks bought by UK businesses every year, that’s £240m, says David Wells, chief executive, Logistics UK.

“Add on the 4% tariff on tyres for vehicles and around the same level for spare parts from the EU, and that equates to a massive tax on logistics companies already reeling from the impact of the Covid-19 economic downturn,” he said.

“This could be the  final straw for many businesses in our sector – as the industry that drives the heart of the UK economy while operating on 2% margins, we simply cannot afford these sorts of sums and they will inevitably be passed on to the consumer in higher prices.”
 
“This is just the tip of the iceberg, with a raft of new tariffs applying indirectly to logistics and other sectors involved in the supply chain, and to the direct costs of thousands of goods from new cars to fresh foods unless the UK agrees a free trade deal with the EU.

“Prices of many everyday items that we buy from the EU will rise as a result, and that inflationary pressure would crush any hope of swift economic growth at a time when we need UK PLC to be standing strong.  Government needs to agree a deal with the EU so that our sector, and the economy at large, can start to build back better with confidence,” Wells said.