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Post Brexit trade agreements could be bad for health warn Public Health Wales

30 Oct 2021 3 minute read
Food bank. Picture by the Welsh Government

A new report urges consideration of public health and well-being in post-Brexit trade agreements to avoid making existing health and inequalities in Wales worse.

The report by Public Health Wales (PHW) called ‘What could post-Brexit trade agreements mean for public health in Wales?’ highlights the risks and opportunities to public health as new trade agreements are negotiated after leaving the EU.

A recently published health impact assessment of Brexit by PHW recognised the need for the public health sector in Wales to be able to engage with trade policy, and for health and well-being to be at the forefront of Welsh Government’s approach to advocating on trade.

This report aims to support that conclusion by highlighting ways in which trade may influence the health and well-being of Wales, and spotlights how trade agreements may worsen inequality in Wales, or stall public health and climate change aims.

While the UK is free to negotiate its own international trade agreements now that it has left the European Union, PHW warns that potential impacts on health and well-being could be seen in several ways including the food cost, quality and availability, healthcare services, job markets and ability to invest in public services.

The key messages from the report are:

• The ways in which trade agreements are likely to affect health and well-being in Wales include changes to employment, farming, food, and the ability to meet its climate change and sustainability ambitions.

• The impacts of trade agreements are likely to be felt differently by different individuals and communities, making it possible that they reinforce or make existing health and inequalities in Wales worse.

• The UK Government are responsible for negotiating all trade agreements and Welsh Government would need to advocate for trade agreements that work for Wales during that process. Neither Welsh MPs nor the Senedd have the power to change or reject new trade agreements.

• So far, the UK Government has not taken proactive steps to use its independent trade policy to promote better public health outcomes. The terms of new trade agreements and related laws may make it harder for the Welsh Government to introduce new policies to improve public health, for example on climate change or helping tackle obesity.

Impacts

Louisa Petchey, Senior Policy Specialist, Policy and International Health, said:

“Trade agreements can have wide reaching impacts on public health – both on the determinants of health and on the ability for governments to improve public health through new policy.

“This paper we are publishing today aims to help trade policy experts understand the relevance of public health to their work and enable public health professionals to identify where trade agreements could affect their efforts to improve public health outcomes.

“The negotiation of new trade agreements certainly brings opportunities for Wales and the rest of the UK, but we need to be alert to the potential unintended, negative consequences for public health as well.

“All of us working in public health in Wales have a role to play in informing the terms of new trade agreements and policy where they relate to our areas of expertise to maximise the potential benefits to health and well-being.”


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Gareth
Gareth
3 years ago

If anybody outside Whitehall or Westminster believes that they can influence trade policy, they are dreamers. Trade deals are being pushed through at pace, to be able to say to Brexit supporters, look at us, delivering on our Brexit promise. The UK Gov has no concerns for PHW or the population in general. If they can vote to allow raw sewage to be dumped, and only reverse due to public outcry, then caring about health outcomes of trade deals will be non-existent.

GW Atkinson
GW Atkinson
3 years ago

Watch the brexiters next week tell us how healthy drinking cow slurry is.

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