![]() Now, more than 18 months after the Trade and Cooperation Agreement came into force, the UK is feeling the effects of being outside the EU’s free movement of labour zone, alongside several other pandemic-related squeezes on the country’s labour market. ![]() The Brexit vote of 2016 was in significant part driven by a desire to end the ‘free movement of people’ after David Cameron’s failure to negotiate some form of opt-out from what is arguably the most fundamental of the ‘four freedoms’ of the EU single market.įor many Remainers there was (and still is) emotional attachment to free movement as a way to connect us deeply with the European neighbourhood but for British business the system offered access to a deep and hugely flexible labour market. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every week This article is an on-site version of our Britain after Brexit newsletter.
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