In response to a UK Government white paper on internal markets, the Farmers’ Union of Wales (FUW) has stressed the importance of protecting Welsh farmers against unfair competition from other parts of the UK and countries across the globe, and that Welsh devolution must be respected.
In his introduction to the UK Internal Market White Paper, Alok Sharma MP, Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, highlights how increasing differences between rules and standards applied by different Governments in the UK’s four nations after Brexit could cause market distortion, discrimination and unfair competition for businesses in a way not seen for hundreds of years.The White Paper therefore proposes measures to prevent such impacts based on the principles of ‘non-discrimination’ and ‘mutual recognition’
The FUW had been highlighting the need to address this issue since the EU Referendum in 2016 and, in July 2018, published a detailed paper considering the matter entitled 'Filling the Void - Steps towards a post-Brexit UK policy framework. However, while the FUW welcomes the UK Government’s recognition of this issue, we are extremely concerned at the suggestion that rules could simply be dictated by London, rather than there being a means by which to reach agreement between UK Governments. Such a move could undermine devolution and work to the disadvantage of Welsh farmers.