EU firms will try for lower tariffs via NI, says Nobel economist

Nobel laureate Professor Paul Krugman is talking at the 28th Annual Economist Government Roundtable in Athens, Greece, on July 2, 2024, at Grand Resort Lagonissi. He has short grey hair, beard and brown eyes, wearing glasses, a black blazer, blue shirt and dark floral tie. Red signage is in the background  saying 'Economist Impact'.Image source, Getty Images
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Nobel prize winning economist Paul Krugman suggested that EU firms will try to export goods via Northern Ireland in an attempt to get a reduced tariff rate

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European Union firms will try to export goods via Northern Ireland in an attempt to get a reduced tariff rate when exporting to the US, a Nobel prize winning economist has suggested.

US President Donald Trump has imposed a 10% tariff on UK goods but a 20% tariff on EU goods.

Northern Ireland is part of UK customs territory but also has an open trade border with the Republic of Ireland, which is in the EU.

Paul Krugman made the comments in conversation with the journalist Ezra Klein, external.

"Probably a lot of EU goods trans-ship through Northern Ireland to get the lower tariff rate," he said.

Typically goods cannot just be exported via a lower tariff country to get a lower tariff.

Instead they need to undergo "substantial transformation" in the lower tariff country, external which usually means some form of processing, although the rules differ from product to product.

Mr Krugman was awarded a Nobel memorial prize, officially called the Sveriges Riksbank Prize, for Economic Sciences in 2008 for his work on international trade theory and economic geography.