Friday February 07, 2025

Most firms find new EU-UK customs controls challenging: survey

Published : 05 Feb 2022, 01:51

  DF News Desk
Police officers check the documents of lorry drivers at the Port of Dover in Dover, Britain, on Dec. 31, 2020. File Photo: Xinhua.

Over half of all firms engaging in importing business from the European Union (EU) to Britain have found the new border controls "challenging," said a survey released Thursday, reported Xinhua.

The full customs control, as agreed in Brexit deals, requests that British importers make a full customs declaration on goods entering Britain since Jan. 1, 2022, as the once-introduced 175-day cushion period is due.

Some controls, including certificates and physical checks on agri-foods and plant imports, are being postponed till July 1 this year.

Twenty-two percent of the involved businesses responded that the controls are "very challenging," according to the survey by the Institute of Directors.

Another 36 percent considered them "quite challenging," said the survey conducted in January by the British professional organization.

Small businesses have been disproportionately hit, according to the survey. Thirty-one percent of them reported "very challenging," compared to 12 percent of medium-sized ones and only seven percent of larger ones.

"Our members have told us these challenges are mainly due to added administration and paperwork, which in many cases means taking on extra costs," said Emma Rowland, policy advisor at the organization.

Smaller businesses "do not have the capacity that larger businesses do to shoulder this burden, both in terms of time and resource," Rowland said.

Rowland urged the government to ramp up awareness and resources for small and medium-sized enterprises ahead of additional controls coming later this year.