With the UK trade data for March just released, this is a good time to ask how UK trade with the EU has evolved during the Covid pandemic and, in particular, after the end of the transition period following Brexit. The analysis focuses on trade in goods since it is free from tariffs and there is no agreement yet regarding trade in services.
UK – EU trade
The figures below show seasonally adjusted data on UK exports to, and imports from, the EU in volume terms (2018 prices).1 Since trade flows fluctuate sharply from month to month, the figures also show the middle half of the observations – the interquartile range – for the reference period 2011-2019.2 Observations below that range indicate less trade than suggested by the historical record.
While exports in January and February 2020 were well within the interquartile range, the start of the Covid pandemic in March led to a sharp fall in exports. Exports remained below the interquartile range in the following months but returned to the range in October – December.
With the transition period ending on December 31, trade was likely boosted in the fourth quarter as companies tried to exploit the more favourable conditions in advance of an expected slowdown in January.
In January 2021, following the end of the transition period, exports to the UK fell about 40% below the median for January in the 2011-19 period. While they recovered strongly in February and the recovery continued in March, they remain a little below the interquartile range
The behaviour of imports from the EU evolve in a broadly similar, but less pronounced, way and is not commented on in the interest of brevity.