Daily Archives: April 4, 2022

Laid Back Bikes: Edinburgh business’s nightmare after Brexit ‘waste of time’ – The National

Posted: April 4, 2022 at 3:10 pm

MORE than a year after the UK fully withdrew from the EU, an Edinburgh business owner has revealed he still spends countless hours on admin just trying to get items to and fromEurope.

David Gardiner, who runs Laid Back Bikes, slammedBrexitas a waste of time as he detailed the myriad ways it has negatively affected his trade with the EU.

The business imports premium bike partsfrom the European Union, builds them and sells them in the UK but Gardiner said it's getting tougher to get cost-effective items on time without hassle.

The finished bicycle can cost as much as 7000 and the business employs Gardiner and his wife and business partner Irene, with other crew employed on an ad hoc basis.

READ MORE:Barrhead business loses out on 50k in EU funding due to Brexit

The Scottish businessmanbemoaned the mountain of paperwork and red tape caused by the 2016 vote to leave the EU.

He said the increased burdens on businesses, that are disproportionately impacting small firms, means he is spending a lot of his time chasing up missing orders and filling out paperwork that wasnt needed prior to Brexit.

Instead of selling bikes, Gardiner has had to dedicate more time to chasing up lost items while spending more money on transport costs, waiting longer for those items to arrive and struggling to track them on their way.

While many firms still want to do business with Gardiner, Laid Back Bikes have been forced to absorb the extra costs of doing business in a post-Brexit Britain.

And hes not the first business to speak out about this. The National has spoken to a number of businesses that share similar concerns. Many Scottish businesses now face increased costs, delays and a big drop in revenue because of Brexit.

David Gardiner said Brexit has made it harder for him to do business with the EU

Gardiner told The National: I've had to deal with the European mainland for years. And before getting a parcel from Amsterdam was just the same as getting the parcel from Cambridge - there was no difference, no more paperwork, and delivery times were reliable.

Now, we don't know where parcels are. We spend a lot of time trying to track stuff down which just wastes our time.

The whole thing is a gigantic waste of time on admin when in fact what we should be doing is addressing our core reason for being which is selling bikes and not worried about the actual admin of getting stuff through customs.

Every day, I've got 50 invoices from a logistics company which all have to be accounted for in their fee agent account package.

Despite using modern technology that used to make the admin part easy, now Gardiner says invoices are all done separately which means extra time devoted to just processing items.

Laid Back Bikes gets parts from the EU but Brexit means those items can often get lost or take much longer than usual to arrive

Gardiner said a hefty chunk of his Vat forms are dedicated to Northern Ireland, which still effectivelyoperates inside the EUs single market.

He said Scotland could have been accommodated for in the way Northern Ireland was, saying if its possible for one nation in the UK it should be possible for another.

READ MORE:Scottish Highland shop owner screwed by Brexit as cost of business goes up

He said: Id like Scotland to be in the single market. I mean, Im looking at my Vat return and it makes you laugh. There are eight boxes to fill in and there of them are specially adapted for Northern Ireland. Scotland could quite easily have been accommodated."

He continued: It would have been so much better if Scotland actually got what it voted for because Scotland's more reliant on trade with Europe.

It doesnt make any sense. Its a completely stupid decision.

If your business has been affected by the UK leaving the EU we would like to hear from you! Get in touch atbit.ly/scotnatbrexitor email craig.meighan@Newsquest.co.uk

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Laid Back Bikes: Edinburgh business's nightmare after Brexit 'waste of time' - The National

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Phantom of the Opera to tour Europe with Chinese production due to Brexit red tape – Classic FM

Posted: at 3:10 pm

31 March 2022, 12:14 | Updated: 31 March 2022, 18:17

The British production of the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical is too complicated and expensive to bring to Europe due to the impact of Brexit.

A Chinese production of the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, Phantom of the Opera, is being brought on tour to Europe, as Brexit red tape has made it too expensive to bring over a British one.

Phantom of the Opera opened in Londons West End in 1986 and became an international sensation, winning an Olivier Award the same year, and the 1988 Tony Award for Best Musical.

The musical has been translated into multiple languages and produced in over 28 countries on six continents, including China.

In a Commons Culture Committee session on promoting Britain abroad earlier this week, Jessica Koravos, President of the Really Useful Group, which promotes the shows of Andrew Lloyd Webber around the world, revealed that bringing a Chinese production of the 1986 musical to Europe was more straightforward and less expensive.

Read more: Busker shocked as real-life West End Christine joins him for stunning Phantom of the Opera duet

Koravos explained, Under the current circumstances, I would not dream of sending a UK production into Europe.

The revelation comes after the former Brexit minister admitted the deal he helped negotiate has negatively impacted touring musicians earlier this month.

Lord David Frost, the former Chief Negotiator of Task Force Europe, said the Brexit deal he helped negotiate presents a whole set of problems for touring musicians and their crew.

He admitted, [the government] should take another look at mobility issues.

In Tuesdays Commons Culture Committee Koravos spotlighted the impact touring regulations have had on theatre.

Koravos explained that the main issue with bringing a British production over to Europe, was that while they could get permission for the Chinese production to perform in the Schengen Area (26 countries), the British one would involve a series of multiple applications to each country within the area.

Read more: Brexit trade deal failed touring musicians, admits former chief negotiator

In response to Koravos revelations, the chair of the culture committee, Julian Knight MP, commented: That one of the all-time great British musical impresarios would not now dream of taking a production rich in West End heritage into the EU from Britain speaks volumes about the impact of the governments approach to supporting touring creatives.

If it wasnt obvious before, the revelation that it is both cheaper and easier for a Chinese production of the Phantom of the Opera to be staged in the EU than it is for a British one, means that the mask has well and truly slipped on the true extent of the problems faced by the UK arts sector.

The current EU visa arrangements are proving economically disastrous for our cultural industries by forcing them to play second fiddle to their international competitors, while having a hugely detrimental effect on the ability of the UK to exercise soft power by promoting Britain abroad post-Brexit.

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Boris Johnson’s lies over Brexit, Partygate and the rest are on collision course with hard reality Joyce McMillan – The Scotsman

Posted: at 3:10 pm

For many in the UK, the outstanding current example is of course the Prime Minister, still refusing to admit that the law was broken on his watch, at No 10, on multiple occasions during the lockdowns of 2020 and 2021; despite the fact that the police finally doing to Boris Johnsons inner circle what they would have done to the rest of us on the spot, months or years ago have issued at least 20 notices of fines to people who attended parties there.

At the time, and particularly in the first lockdown of 2020, the same Prime Minister was warning the rest of us that we had to stay at home, work from home, educate our children at home, and only go out once a day for some brief exercise.

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We could meet one other person from a different household, provided we only exercised outdoors together, and did not stop to socialise; and of course, people everywhere were forbidden to visit elderly relatives in care or those in hospital, who were suffering alone, dying alone, and often being mourned by people who were alone. For most of us at that time, parties of any sort were simply unthinkable.

Yet this is an experience a very real one, etched on millions of memories that Boris Johnson and those who continue to support him are now trying to efface, with their blithe talk of just a few parties, and their inaccurate claims that everyone broke the rules no, we did not and that when it came to Covid, Boris Johnson got all the big decisions right; when in fact from locking down too late in 2020, to squandering billions on unusable equipment, to presiding over the highest death toll in western Europe the Johnson government got many of those big decisions tragically wrong.

Lying in politics is nothing new, of course; fooling most of the people most of the time has always been the name of the game, for some politicians.

No-one denies, though, that the lying and gaslighting the imposition of narratives that directly contradict peoples lived experience has taken on a new intensity in the age of mass electronic communications and the internet.

For years, in the decade between 2010 and 2020, western thinkers and pundits were preoccupied with the narrative-shifting techniques allegedly developed by Vladimir Putin and his close advisor Vladislav Surkov, and the impact they might be having on western politics for example during Britains EU referendum, and during the Trump presidency; a concern which, in western minds, slightly overshadowed the almost unchallenged power of the present Russian regime to impose fabricated narratives on its own people, a clear 70 per cent of whom, according to polls, now fully accept the official account of Russia trying to save Ukraine from a government of Nazi drug addicts, cynically bombing its own people.

And the question that remains for all of us, in this age of lying liars in power, is what weapons we have against their false narratives. To begin with, it seems to me that we as voters and citizens have to become expert at not tarring all politicians with the same brush.

The politician does not exist, after all, who has never told a lie; indeed to present yourself in a positive light to the electorate, as a democratic politician must, is almost inevitably to gloss over sins and errors, and to exaggerate achievements.

There is a difference, though, between politicians who tell half-truths to burnish their political record, and politicians who commit themselves wholesale to a grand narrative which they know to be false; a difference between the everyday evasions of political debate, and the chill of having your known reality completely contradicted and denied, whether over Covid in the UK, or war in Ukraine, or the threat of climate change.

And in making these distinctions, citizens will also need the help of a new generation of journalists, less wedded to the now dysfunctional idea of impartiality between competing political actors, and instead dedicated to establishing facts and exposing the truth, wherever they may find it.

Its also vital, I think, that we learn to call out the idea, very popular in some elite circles, that reality now barely exists, and can always be batted away by a new narrative line.

Concepts to do with human rights and freedoms, with the rule of law and good governance, may have first been codified in the context of a deeply flawed and imperialistic western civilisation.

The ideas themselves, though, have a fundamental strength and validity that transcends that history; and wherever people are subjected to unbearable suffering because of the actions of others Ukraine, Yemen, Afghanistan, or among the most vulnerable in supposedly wealthy countries those values resurface in the ancient cry for justice, for compassion, for human dignity and freedom, and for the accountability of those in power.

So try telling a woman whose toddler is starving to death in the ruins of Mariupol, or who is struggling to protect her Pacific island home from ever-rising seawater, or who is sitting in a cold house somewhere in Britain looking at a power bill she can never pay, that reality no longer exists, and can no longer bite.

As Robert Burns wrote, long ago, facts are chiels that winna ding. And sooner or later unless we commit ourselves once more to a politics broadly based on truth, and face up, together, to the facts as we know them, and the response they demand reality will come for us all; in a way that no narrative can disguise, and from which no virtual alternative can protect us, any more.

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Boris Johnson's lies over Brexit, Partygate and the rest are on collision course with hard reality Joyce McMillan - The Scotsman

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DUP will not return to Northern Ireland executive without changes to Brexit protocol, Jeffrey Donaldson vows – Independent.ie

Posted: at 3:10 pm

The DUP will not return to a powersharing executive at Stormont until the Government acts to restore Northern Irelands status within the UK internal market, Jeffrey Donaldson has insisted.

he party leader said he was a committed devolutionist and claimed direct rule from Westminster would result in bad decisions for the region, but he said Stormont could only work if it was built on solid foundations.

He made clear that changes to Brexits contentious Northern Ireland Protocol, which has created trade barriers on goods shipped to the region from Great Britain, had to be delivered before he would consider returning to a fully functioning executive.

Addressing a party election event at a cinema in Dundonald in east Belfast, Mr Donaldson told colleagues: The protocol must be replaced with arrangements that protect Northern Irelands place within the United Kingdom.

The DUP collapsed the executive in February when its first minister Paul Givan resigned in protest at the protocol.

The move automatically ousted Sinn Fein deputy First Minister Michelle ONeill from her job and removed the administrations ability to meet or make significant decisions.

Powersharing rules mean a properly functioning administration can only be formed if the largest unionist and largest nationalist parties agree to enter the joint office of the first and deputy first ministers.

While polls indicate that the DUP is on course to be returned as the largest unionist party at Mays Assembly election, it is at risk of losing its status as the biggest overall party to Sinn Fein.

Aside from the protocol, Sir Jeffrey has repeatedly refused to confirm whether the DUP would take the post of deputy first minister alongside a Sinn Fein first minister.

He did so again on Monday, though he did add that he was a democrat and would respect the election result.

The Lagan Valley MP also declined to definitively confirm whether he would remain an MLA if he is elected in May.

There has been mounting speculation that Mr Donaldson may decide to co-opt a colleague into his Assembly seat and remain as an MP until such time as the DUP is prepared to restore the executive.

Mr Donaldson said the replacement of the protocol must be achieved either by way of a negotiated agreement with the EU or by the UK Government acting unilaterally.

He said that the New Decade, New Approach agreement that restored powersharing in Belfast in 2020 contained a pledge from the Government to legislate to protect Northern Irelands place within the UK market.

The UK Government has not delivered on that commitment, he said.

Until they do, I will not be going back into an executive that is required to implement a protocol that harms Northern Ireland every day.

The DUP booked a cinema screen in Dundonald on Monday to showcase a party film on its Five Point Plan for the election campaign.

The plan seeks to fix the national health service; grow the economy; help working families; remove the Irish Sea border; and keep Northern Irelands schools world class.

Mr Donaldson told fellow election candidates that a Sinn Fin victory in the election would lead to intensified calls for a divisive border poll on Northern Irelands constitutional status.

Asked again whether his party would serve as deputy first minister alongside a Sinn Fin first minister, he said: I have yet to meet the political leader, football manager or business owner who sets out his or her stall on the basis of what happens if theyre defeated, or if they lose or if theyre not successful, and thats not the business Im in.

I am a democrat, I will accept the outcome of the election. But I dont want the outcome of this election to be a Sinn Fein victory leading to a divisive border poll and endless years of bickering and squabbling in Northern Ireland.

Pressed on whether he would remain an MLA if elected, he said: The reason that I am putting my name forward for election in Lagan Valley is because I want to return to Stormont and I want to lead the DUP Assembly team in Stormont.

He added: I am very clear, until these issues are resolved, then I cant see that theres a basis for forming an executive that is required to implement the protocol.

So, Im committed to devolution, Im committed to the Northern Ireland Assembly, Im committed to seeing Stormont deliver for everyone in Northern Ireland. Thats why Im standing as a candidate in this election to lead our team forward and to win the election.

He insisted that devolution was the best form of governance for the region.

Devolved government in Belfast gives unionists and nationalists a real say in many of the issues that affect our everyday lives, he said.

I want to see all of our political institutions up and running and working to deliver for the people of Northern Ireland.

Our system of government is far from perfect, and needs further reform, but I believe in devolution.

Its good for unionism and its good for Northern Ireland.

I dont need to tell you that many of the decisions that we have objected to most over the last ten years have not been taken at Stormont but at Westminster.

Anyone who believes that having no say in our future is a recipe for success simply hasnt learnt the lessons of history.

But we must build our political institutions on solid foundations.

The protocol has harmed Northern Ireland and it does not enjoy unionist support.

Pretending problems dont exist is not a solution.

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DUP will not return to Northern Ireland executive without changes to Brexit protocol, Jeffrey Donaldson vows - Independent.ie

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2021 Thematic Research into the Impact of Brexit on Retail – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Benzinga – Benzinga

Posted: at 3:10 pm

The "Impact of Brexit on Retail - Thematic Research" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report provides a comprehensive overview of the retail, consumer and regulatory trends post-Brexit along with a discussion on changes in the retail industry. The report goes on to discuss trade agreements made in response to Brexit as well as the impact on the retail value chain and players.

Brexit has significantly impacted consumers and retailers operating in the UK and the EU in a myriad of ways, including trade tariffs, movement of goods, changes in the labor market, and general repercussions relating to consumer attitudes and buying behavior across the region.

Companies Mentioned

Scope

Reasons to Buy

Key Topics Covered:

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/gxqyfy

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220404005484/en/

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2021 Thematic Research into the Impact of Brexit on Retail - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Benzinga - Benzinga

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Brexit threatening London Market’s influence in the insurance industry: Airmic – Reinsurance News

Posted: at 3:10 pm

Airmic, the UK association for risk and insurance professionals has said that Brexit is threatening the London Markets influence in the global industry.

This was reported in the companys March 2022 Pulse Survey which took place between March 3-11.

One of the questions in the survey asked how has the influence of the UK insurance market changed since Brexit.

5% of the participants said it has strengthened slightly, 15% said it has waned significantly, another 15% said it has waned slightly, and 65% said that it has not changed.

In the report, the company said that London used to be the European Unions hub for financial services, but Brexit has now led insurers to shift-decision making powers back to their headquarters in other countries.

Continued focus on regulation, talent, sustainability, and evolving consumer preferences will be crucial to securing the London Markets global competitiveness, Airmic said.

In addition, the report also stated that the London Market urgently needs to maintain the pace of change post-pandemic, in order to build its resilience and relevance for the future.

This was highlighted in the question that asked if the momentum for change in the insurance market created by the pandemic is being sustained, with 53% saying yes, and 47% saying no.

The survey also focused on whether the hard market is softening. Results for Q1 2022 showed that 70% of participants perceive the insurance market currently to be hard, while 30% felt that it was neutral, a significant difference compared to the results from Q3 2021, which saw 92% voting hard, and just 8% voting neutral.

This shows that the pace of hardening has slowed since 2021, but there are still concerns within the company that insurance market conditions could yet deteriorate, as this was addressed in the question that asked participants how they expect the insurance market to be at the end of 2022, with 44% saying it will deteriorate, 22% saying it that it will improve, and 23% saying that it will remain consistent.

The survey also addressed a growing concern surrounding how current insurers could lose business to more modern, agile insurance competitors.

In a question that asked whether the London Markets current IT infrastructure system is currently fit for purpose, 33% voted for the option that said no, not at all, while 67% voted for the other option that still said no, but that it is gradually improving.

The survey also highlighted some of the key obstacles that are currently stopping the markets infrastructure from improving. This included, lack of collaboration between insurers which received over 70%, lack of investment which received 60%, and not enough understanding of technology among the markets decision makers, also receiving 60%.

Airmic said: Our respondents have sounded a dire warning that the London Markets legacy systems will doom it to irrelevance. Greater investment and understanding of technology among the markets decision makers are critical to improving the markets infrastructure.

Premium rates for cyber have also skyrocketed, as a tenth of the surveys respondents experienced rate increases of more than 400%.

Highlighting some of the key results from the survey, Airmic said in the report that the insurance model is changing and how it is now more geared towards understanding risk and managing it better.

Climate change is expected to cause a seismic growth in economic losses, and global insurance premiums will also reach record levels.

The insurance industry needs to rise to the challenge urgently. It needs to shift its focus from protection to prevention. New technologies such as artificial intelligence and machine learning will be key to reducing costs and creating value for all parties.

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Have Brexit, pollution and the pandemic killed the great British shellfish industry? – The Telegraph

Posted: at 3:10 pm

Every time they send a load over, they have to produce a 14-page export health certificate and have it signed by an official vet to confirm it is free from disease. It has to be manually printed by the vet and stamped 43 times and have his signature on it 45 times and we have to cross out all the exact bits that are not relevant to our specific export, says Sarah. [And it has to be done] in English and in French. There is huge margin for human error, not to mention the fact that there are hardly any vets certified to inspect live bivalve molluscs.

Nicky heats up a pan of garlicky mussels for us to try. I ask if they have lost money since all this began. They look at each other and laugh. Its difficult to put a firm figure on it, says John. We had seven months last year where we were not allowed to send a single thing, says Sarah.

If they lose their exports, they will go out of business. Couldnt they purify the mussels here? To purify the volume we produce, that capacity doesnt exist in the whole of the UK put together, says John. And theres too little demand in the UK to rely solely on that market.

For some fishermen, though, selling locally could be part of the answer. Martin Laitys family have had oyster beds in the River Fal in Cornwall for generations. He can trace his familys fishing lineage in Cornwall back to 1542. Their business, which mainly sells Queen scallops and oysters, and exports all over the world, kept going through both world wars. Then at the start of Brexit, we were shut down for two and a half months, says Laity.

He has spent 14 months intensely trying to sort out the mess, liaising with Defra and customs officers as he tries to get some help for his fellow oystermen and fishermen. The industry cant exist without export. Theres no question about it. Who are you going to get in the UK to consume 2,000 tonnes of winkles a year?

Laity, 52, a father-of-two who hopes to pass on his business, Sailors Creek Shellfish, to his children, set up a market called The Food Barn in Tregew during lockdown, selling local produce including his shellfish: Its working. We sell hundreds of oysters on a Saturday morning market.

Restaurants and other UK customers are starting to come through, too. People are thinking, well, use it or lose it. The numbers, this January in particular, have been quite phenomenal. Were selling well over 1,000 oysters a day in the UK unheard of in the past.

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Have Brexit, pollution and the pandemic killed the great British shellfish industry? - The Telegraph

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Brexit betrayal! PM slammed as Welsh microchip factory sold to China: ‘Not protecting us’ – Express

Posted: at 3:10 pm

The Government has decided not to block the sale of Newport Wafer Fab, the UK's largest semiconductor plant, to Nexperia, a Dutch subsidiary of the Chinese technology company Wingtech. Semiconductors, also known as microchips, are a critical component of electronic devices, including smartphones. A major controversy broke out after Nexperia attempted to buy the plant last spring.

Following the uproar, in June, Mr Johnson announced an investigation into the case, launching a review by the Governments national security adviser, Sir Stephen Lovegrove.

Six months later, Sir Lovegrove has concluded that there is no risk to the UKs security, and thus there is no reason to block the sale, Politico reported.

Conservative MPs have already raised alarm bells following the decision, arguing that Mr Lovegrove is applying too narrow of a definition of UK security.

Tom Tugendhat, the chairman of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, said: Its not clear why we havent used our new powers under the National Security and Investment Act to fully review the takeover of one of our leading compound semiconductor companies.

He added: This is an area where China is sinking billions to compete.

The government has no clear strategy to protect whats left of our semiconductor industry.

The National Security and Investment Act (NSI) came into force on January 4, 2022.

The post-Brexit act gives the Government powers to scrutinise and intervene in business transactions, such as takeovers, to protect national security.

It comes after Mr Johnson promised to "back" British businesses.

READ MORE:Why is there a semiconductor shortage?

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TechUK calls on government to seize post-Brexit data opportunities – ComputerWeekly.com

Posted: at 3:10 pm

TechUK has published a paper ahead of the governments response to itsconsultation about reforms to the data protection regime, Data: a new direction, held towards the end of 2021.

In the paper, the IT supplier association has set out six principles for the government to adopt to seize what it calls post-Brexit opportunities, with a bold approach to data policy.

Meanwhile its Digital economy monitor, an ongoing survey of TechUK members, recently found that 76% see research and development (R&D) and innovation as either important or very important for their UK operations. But the organisation said its members cite confusing and unclear rules as holding them back from investing further in the UK. Almost one-third suggested removing regulatory barriers to innovation and the deployment of new technologies and products (29%), such as through data policy.

Neil Ross, associate director for policy at TechUK, said: Developing a clearer, more trusted and innovation-enabling data governance system is one of the most obvious opportunities of Brexit.

In doing so, the UK must find the right balance between upholding citizens rights, allowing data to be reused for research and innovation, while also supporting global data flows.

By putting forward these principles for reform, TechUK believes the UK can strike this balance and unlock the next wave of data-driven innovation. However, the government will need to be bold and embrace these opportunities, otherwise risks only achieving half-hearted changes, and creating extra compliance for UK businesses without seizing any of the benefits for increasing UK R&D and innovation.

TechUK is calling on the government to take what it calls a focused approach to supporting R&D and innovation by making reforms to its data protection regime that provide organisations with clear rules and more confidence when pursuing data-driven research projects.

The six principles identified by TechUK and its members are:

Under the last principle, the trade body takes issue with a concerning shift towards data localisation policies which pose a serious threat to the future of international trade and innovation, adding: To be an effective advocate for increased international digital trade cooperation, the UK government must address its own disconnect between its global commitment to push back against this trend, and its policy interventions at home, which have contained provisions that promote data localisation.

The organisation also said: The current GDPR [General Data Protection Regulation] is an example of regulation that has caused legal uncertainty for businesses seeking to innovate, with some being unable or choosing not to use data to the fullest extent due to a lack of clarity in the law.

It is also urging the government to pick up the pace with respect to the National Data Strategy by boosting data skills in the population and increasing collaboration between public and private sectors.

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Kieran Maguire tips more Celtic stars to follow Ben Doak to England as Brexit impact explained – Football Insider

Posted: at 3:10 pm

More Celtic rising stars could follow Ben Doak to England because of Brexits impact on the youth recruitment market.

That is the view of finance guru Kieran Maguire, speaking exclusively to Football Insider about the 16-year-old wingers departure to Liverpool.

As relayed by The Athletic last Thursday (31 March), Celtic will receive 600,000 in compensation for the academy star.

Doak was yet to sign a professional contract with the Hoops but had featured twice for the senior team.

His exit at such a young age means that Celtic have been unable to recoup the kind of big-money fee they received for the likes of Kieran Tierney.

The United Kingdoms exit from the European Union has shrunk the recruitment pool for players under the age of 18.

And Maguire anticipates that the likes of Celtic could continue to have their best young talents poached as a result.

Its really frustrating, he told Football Insiders Adam Williams.

Its business, but this is also on the back of Brexit.

Because English clubs can no longer recruit 16 and 17-year-olds from the EU, there will be more snaffling of players from English and Scottish clubs.

Its a disadvantage of Brexit from Celtics point of view. Their young players who are yet to sign professional contracts and that means they are targets.

Because the Premier League cant recruit from Europe, they target players from England and Scotland.

Doak will not be eligible to play academy games for Liverpool until next season.

He has netted four times in seven appearances for Scotland Under-17s.

In other news, medical expert issues huge Christopher Jullien claim after behind-the-scenes Celtic news.

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