Strategic Significance
Brexit represents a rare case study in the deliberate imposition of trade frictions upon an integrated economy. Its significance lies in the demonstration that trade barriers, even when small, compound over time to fundamentally alter firm behavior—exemplified by the 14% exit rate of exporters.
Who Should Care
Policymakers, economists, and global business investors should care because this case illustrates how administrative volatility can stifle growth more effectively than macro-level shocks. It serves as a warning for how regulatory divergence functions as a hidden tax.
Contrarian Takeaway
The services sector performed well 'despite' rather than 'because of' Brexit, suggesting that Britain’s competitive advantage resides in intangible, low-friction digital and creative work, which may have been underestimated by those focusing purely on physical goods trade.
