From the BBC:
“Brexit:
What you need to know about the UK leaving the EU”
While you were
settling in to enjoy Christmas Eve, the UK and European Union finally agreed a
deal that will define their future relationship. Ever since the UK left the the
EU on 31 January, both sides have been talking about what the new rules should
be. The negotiations went to the wire, as the current arrangement ends on 31
December.
What do we
know about the deal? The deal contains new rules for how the UK and EU will
live, work and trade together. But we don't know a lot of the detail yet
because the full document - expected to be well over 1,000 pages long - has not
been released.
What we do
know is that it means: No taxes on each other's goods when they cross
borders (known as tariffs) No limits on the amount of things which can
be traded (known as quotas) European Commission president Ursula Von der
Leyen said competition rules - designed to prevent one side gaining an unfair
advantage - "will be fair and remain so". he said the UK and
EU will "continue co-operating in all areas of mutual interest, including
things like climate change, energy, security and transport". We
also know the UK will not be taking part in the Erasmus exchange programme for
students.
Why did the
deal take so long? Because so much was at stake. The EU is the UK's
nearest and biggest trading partner, The UK government says the deal covers
trade that was worth £668bn in 2019. While the UK was in the EU,
companies could buy and sell goods across EU borders without paying tariffs.
Without the deal, businesses would have had to start paying these taxes,
which would have added to their costs. No deal would have also meant
even more border checks, which could have caused delays for lorries
transporting products.
What happens
next? Even though the deal has been agreed, it still needs to be made law.
For that to happen it must be looked at and approved by both the UK and
European parliaments. As it's been left so late, the European Parliament
won't have time to sign it off before the end of the year. That shouldn't stop
the deal coming into force on 1 January, but it will take longer before it's
officially rubber-stamped. The UK government says it will summon MPs
back on 30 December to vote on the deal. However, there wouldn't be time to
debate and look at the details closely.
And in one
sentence? Both sides are relieved there is a deal, but people and
businesses don't have much time to prepare for the changes starting on 1
January.
What are the
EU and Brexit? The EU is made up of 27 European countries. EU
citizens are free to live and work in other EU countries, and firms in those
countries can buy and sell each other's goods without checks or extra taxes at
borders. The UK was the first country to leave the EU and this was known
as Brexit - British exit. Brexit happened because a public vote - or
referendum - was held in June 2016, to decide whether the UK should be in the
EU. Leave won by 52% to 48%.
What Brexit
words mean The last few years have seen many words and phrases enter our
lives. We haven't used them here, but politicians do use them. Here's what some
of them mean: Transition period: The 11-month period following the UK's
exit from the EU (finishing at the end of 2020), during which time the UK has
followed EU rules, to allow leaders to make a deal Free trade agreement:
This is what the EU and the UK have now agreed - a deal between countries that
encourages trade by getting rid of barriers like taxes on goods WTO
rules: If countries don't have free trade agreements, they must trade according
to rules set by a global body called the World Trade Organization (WTO), which
can mean taxes on goods
^ Until the UK
and all the EU member countries sign the Brexit Agreement I won’t believe it is
real. ^
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