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Freeports and Charter Cities

ska invita

back on the other side
what are peoples thoughts on freeports. looks to me like the major post-brexit development strategy.

i vaguely remember reading about freeports 20 years ago now in Naomi Kleins No Logo, and they sounded like a disaster, but i dont remember the details

theres also the issue of charter cities - i dont know about any of this, would welcome more info

is there a relationship between what is happening and brexit?


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We have bonded warehouses in the UK and have done for centuries. A Freeport is a larger version, in one place with the attached customs staff present to ensure tax is paid.
Very popular with importers of expensive rugs. They can bring them in without paying tax initially. Only paying the import taxes when the items are sold.
 
We have bonded warehouses in the UK and have done for centuries. A Freeport is a larger version, in one place with the attached customs staff present to ensure tax is paid.
Very popular with importers of expensive rugs. They can bring them in without paying tax initially. Only paying the import taxes when the items are sold.


Also popular with importers of drugs :)
 
What do you think about Freeport’s?
are you asking me?
my memory of reading about them in No Logo is that they are a disaster*. i dont have a copy anymore, would revisit it otherwise. will have a look online.
there might be a case to make that they will help out run down uk ports. i am deeply sceptical. to me this is a major sign of the singapore on the atlantic that we are moving towards post brexit. deregulation is the goal now
but i dont have enough knowledge about it. going on hunch and scraps at the moment.

*ETA: "special economic zones" they were called then - im presuming its the same thing, in principle at least
 
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FT published something today on it - C&pd

More than 30 UK bidders ready to pursue 10 freeport zones
Brexiters regard low-tax special economic areas as benefit of leaving the EU

At least 30 ports and airports around the UK are considering bids for just 10 slots to become freeports — special economic zones that will benefit from lower taxes — which were presented by Brexiters as a benefit of leaving the EU. The level of interest will come as a boost to Boris Johnson, who has hailed freeports as a key tool in the UK prime minister’s “levelling-up” agenda aimed at tackling regional inequality.

The deadline for bids in England is Friday — with winners announced by the spring — but the process is moving more slowly in Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. Before becoming chancellor, Rishi Sunak presented freeports as one of the benefits of Brexit. In reality the UK had several freeports while it was within the EU and axed them in 2012 when the Conservatives were governing in coalition with the Liberal Democrats.

The Treasury is currently consulting on specific advantages that could be conferred to selected sites, which can be as large as 45km across. As a backbench MP in 2017, Mr Sunak wrote a paper advocating freeports — a zone considered to be outside its home country for customs purposes, allowing goods or components to be brought in tariff-free, only incurring duties at the point of export.

We remain open to the prospect but continue to seek reassurance from the UK government about the associated risks, and that they will be treated as favourably as freeports in England Welsh government spokesman Ministers also want to offer potential tax breaks such as lower employer National Insurance contributions, R&D tax credits, lower stamp duty and a light-touch planning system.

But there is scepticism about Mr Sunak’s claims that freeports would create “national hubs for trade” and “turbo-charge” the UK’s economic recovery. Instead industry is concerned it would instead simply shift investment from one location to another. Moreover, a recent European Parliament report on the risks of tax evasion and money-laundering in freeports, highlighted one in Luxembourg that had become a depot to store high-value art. Adam Marshall, head of the British Chambers of Commerce, has said his members were nervous that jobs could be “displaced”, while an internal Treasury document conceded that “zone-based policy can have a displacement effect”.

Under Mr Sunak’s plans, there will be at least seven freeports in England and one each in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. The Scottish government last month announced its own plan for special economic zones, dubbing them “green ports”. These would offer a package of tax and customs reliefs but would also have to pay the “real living wage”, commit to sustainable growth and contribute to Scotland’s net zero carbon target.

A list of 33 potential candidates (some including more than one site) has been compiled by an industry lobby group, based on a mix of public and private pronouncements. It includes 17 in England, eight in Scotland and four in each of Wales and Northern Ireland. The geographic spread of confirmed bidders and the limit on the number of freeports suggests there will be some intense local battles. On the north-east coast, for example, Tyneside, Teesport and Humberside have applied.

At least two UK airports — East Midlands, and Bournemouth International, which has teamed up with the nearby port of Poole — have also said they will bid. London Gateway, the container port on the Thames, has submitted a joint application with Tilbury — a commodities port — and Ford Dagenham, where the carmaker has an engine plant.

The Welsh government has not yet opened a bidding process because it is concerned the low-tax zones will simply attract businesses that would have located elsewhere and result in lost revenue. A Welsh government spokesman said: “We remain open to the prospect but continue to seek reassurance from the UK government about the associated risks, and that they will be treated as favourably as freeports in England.”

Northern Ireland has also not yet opened its bidding process.
 
Newstatesman take written by a business investor - also C&P as i know some people cant read it


10 November 2020
The freeport con
The government is championing free economic zones, but experts are sceptical.


Addressing the nation in 1931, the leader of the Liberal Party and former prime minister, David Lloyd George, said: “No human system is perfect, but the system of freeports with all its faults has built up for us the greatest international trade in the world.” Lloyd George was making an impassioned speech in defence of free trade, set against an eerily familiar backdrop of rising right-wing populism and protectionism across Europe.

Today, the Conservative government is championing freeports, too. They are a key part of Boris Johnson’s much-trumpeted “levelling up” agenda. Like Lloyd George, the government claims to be fighting for free trade, and today’s campaign is driven by proponents of Brexit. Chief among these has been the Chancellor Rishi Sunak. His 2016 report, The Freeports Opportunity: How Brexit Could Boost Trade, Manufacturing and the North, criticised EU law for holding back the potential of British ports.

The UK government’s vague use of the term “freeport” refers to special economic zones, also known as “free zones”. These are designated areas within a country (inland or coastal) that benefit from special business perks, such as reduced tariffs, taxes and regulation.

The exact composition of the proposed freeports remains unclear. However, the latest government consultation – undertaken in October – says their mission is to “turbo-charge post-Brexit trade [and] create jobs, drive investment and regenerate communities”.

There are several thousand free zones around the world, the vast majority of which are in emerging markets. The Conservative government has praised the successes of freeports Singapore and Hong Kong.

“Freeports make sense for those locations, but not for the UK,” says Peter Holmes from the UK Trade Policy Observatory. Unlike Hong Kong, the UK is not a port city located in a country where tariff rates are high. Free zones have been deployed with greatest success in less developed countries where, outside them, companies are hindered by a combination of heavy custom duties, red tape, poor infrastructure or legal instability. “Traditional free zones solve problems in the developing world that basically don’t exist in Britain,” explains Meredith Crowley, an international trade economist at the University of Cambridge.

One of the main objectives of the UK’s freeports, as per the latest report from the government, is to simplify customs procedures and duty suspensions on goods. “But the UK already has very low tariffs and streamlined regulations, so there’s almost nothing to be gained by giving tariff exemptions,” says Holmes.

This traditional use of free zones – focused on tariff reductions – is aimed at manufacturing and logistics companies, a limited pool of economic activity. In his 2016 report, Sunak praised free zones of this kind in the United States, citing the tens of thousands of jobs they have ostensibly created.#

“However, the UK doesn’t have high tariffs on intermediate goods, the kind of materials you use to process stuff into a finished car, for example. The US does, and therefore benefits more from these free zones,” explains Alex Stojanovic, a researcher at the Institute for Government.

The US context is very different. “The comparison is complete nonsense,” says Holmes. “If we apply the American model to the UK, the only real sector that would benefit is dog food, literally.” Crowley is equally scathing: “The American zones are basically a tax relief program for larger US firms who know about, or can afford, the legal costs of becoming part of a free zone.

“It’s not that many jobs were being created by the existence of the free zones. Companies just realised they could move their factory – and thousands of workers – into a zone, on paper. Then, the US just draws a line around them,” she adds.

There is also the fact that the vast majority of business activity in US free zones goes towards production and warehousing, according to Sunak’s 2016 report. “The UK regions outside of London need free zones that attract value-added companies, not more low-skilled assembly-type jobs. R&D centres and professional services don’t import parts and components, so they don’t care about tariff removals,” says Holmes.

Although tariff reductions are part of the UK’s freeport strategy, the government is also taking a broader approach akin to the enterprise zones of the 1980s and the George Osborne era. In essence, these are free zones that focus on decreasing tax, not tariffs. “Enterprise zones of the past didn’t really create many jobs, but displaced companies who just shifted their economic activity to new locations to get tax benefits,” says Stojanovic.

The only unequivocally successful enterprise zone has been the Royal Docks, which created Canary Wharf. However, the only reason it was able to generate high-skilled jobs was due to its location in London, a high-skill catchment area that benefits from numerous public transport links.

Freeport tax incentives will not move jobs from London to Sunderland, but from regional capitals like Newcastle to Sunderland, contends Holmes. Research from the Centre of Cities shows the importance of supporting these regional capitals, and the risks posed by spreading government investments – such as free zones – to areas of the UK that lack a sufficient base line of skills and infrastructure.

Can freeports help deprived parts of the UK attract high skilled jobs? “Depressed regions of the economy need more than a few tariff and tax cuts. There’s a much deeper problem: a lack of skills and infrastructure,” says Crowley. “Freeports are not needed to boost infrastructure, housing and education spending, or experiment with regulation such as much-needed improvements to planning permissions,” she adds. To “streamline” planning processes is one of the freeports’ key missions.

Reducing regulation just in free zones could also have negative environmental consequences. “There’s a risk of freeports becoming Wild West zones, not least as offshore havens for corrupt elites to stash artworks and launder money,” says Holmes. In this regard, Transparency International has raised serious concerns, while the EU has long been suspicious of freeports.

Despite these risks, and the hazy evidence supporting their regenerative impact, many locations have shown extreme enthusiasm in receiving freeport status. The bidding process will formally begin at the end of the year.

Stojanovic thinks that some bidder-locales are not even sure of the benefits. “But they don’t want to lose out on competitors and they take every opportunity to get extra funding from the national government.” Extra funding for local authorities is indeed sparse.

Covid-19 has made the “levelling up” of the UK’s unequal economies more urgent than ever. But Johnson’s “freeports”, whether the term is an homage to Lloyd George or not, will do little to bolster the regions in the economic crisis.

This article originally apeared in the Spotlight report on regional development. Click here for the full edition.
Sebastian Shehadi is a senior editor at Investment Monitor.
 
Supposedly Sunak's father in law is involved in creating them in India.

Another comment I found: “In a bad case scenario, [these zones] simply don't gain any traction and any public investment in their establishment is lost,” “In a worst case scenario, already established business relocates to the zones and pays significantly less taxes than before without generating any more economic activity and employment.”
not just about tax, its about working/environmental conditions too

Still not clear the difference between a freeport and a charter city
 
Knowing the tories, the 'Freeport's will share many of the characteristics of the old Enterprise Zones that included the London Docklands.

Along with their fabled wealth/job creation potential, they all shared a number of common downsides:
  • A lack of democratic accountability with LAs excluded from decision making
  • Reducing LA business rate revenues in areas of deprivation with higher expenditure
  • Moving existing jobs around rather than creating new net employment
  • Creating 'dead zones' of business out-migration around their peripheries
  • Unplanned development
  • Inadequate infrastructural provision etc.
 
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The international art market is completely intertwined with freeports. There's plenty of material online about this. A few years ago insurance firms expressed concerns over the combination of insanely high value artworks being stored in freeports and their frequent proximity to places where potentially serious accidents can happen, such as airports.
 
theres a thing about charter cities here

sound like anarcho-capitalist city-states
 
theres a thing about charter cities here

sound like anarcho-capitalist city-states
Late capitalist, neoliberal end-point of the consolidator state.
 
theres a thing about charter cities here

sound like anarcho-capitalist city-states
someone really needs to get Starmer involved in this issue to find out what flags they should be using
 
what do you mean by consolidator state?
A term commonly used by Streeck (amongst others) to describe the modern neoliberal state determined to sustain the attractiveness of the State in the eyes of investors: credit, rather than self-sufficiency, is the name of the game. Using policy agendas like austerity & 'small-state' the consolidator state essentially acts as a decreasingly democratic vehicle to transfer tax on labour into private accumulation. Once you get that so mush of what passes for politics begins to make sense.

Useful reader.
 
Should have added that Streeck posits the consolidator state as the teleological end-point of the welfare state --> debt state (public) & (private) --> consolidator state development of the state 1945 - present.
 
The Hanseatic League had a freeport on the Thames for a few centuries. The site in now under Cannon Street station.


They also had enclaves in Kings Lynn and otehr towns King's Lynn
 
are you asking me?
my memory of reading about them in No Logo is that they are a disaster*. i dont have a copy anymore, would revisit it otherwise. will have a look online.
there might be a case to make that they will help out run down uk ports. i am deeply sceptical. to me this is a major sign of the singapore on the atlantic that we are moving towards post brexit. deregulation is the goal now
but i dont have enough knowledge about it. going on hunch and scraps at the moment.

*ETA: "special economic zones" they were called then - im presuming its the same thing, in principle at least

Covid levels are low though
 
Freeport’s hold about 90% of the worlds super £ fine art. Switzerland has a massive Freeport economy section that is used to legitimately obscure assets held and muddy the trail of tax liabilities . This isn’t new for the Swiss.


 
Freeport’s hold about 90% of the worlds super £ fine art. Switzerland has a massive Freeport economy section that is used to legitimately obscure assets held and muddy the trail of tax liabilities . This isn’t new for the Swiss.


Or the City of London.
 
Sunak has announced where the freeports are to be:

East Midlands airport, Liverpool, Felixstowe, Humber, Plymouth, Thames, Teesside, and Solent.

Not sure what Thames means exactly. Solent is pretty broad too.
 
Hurray for free-trade zones! Liberate business from taxes and environmental/workers standards!

It sounds enormous:
"Rather than restricting the Teesside Freeport to just one area, the bid, put together by Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen, covers sites across the region, including Teesworks, Wilton International, Teesside International Airport, the Port of Middlesbrough, the Port of Hartlepool, Liberty Steel and LV Shipping. By spreading out the Freeport maximum benefit can be gained for the people of Teesside, Darlington and Hartlepool.
Covering 4,500 acres, the equivalent of 2,550 football pitches, the Teesside Freeport will be the biggest in the UK. "

Thats over 7 square miles.

I think thats basically Charter City territory
 
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In very broad terms, societies that have a degree of accountability to local communities have tended to resist SEZ arrangements.

I'm not convinced the UK has that local accountability, frankly.

This is total bullshit and will only accelerate domestic inequality imo.
 
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