Brexit deal not delivering for businesses
    
Over half of UK companies currently face  difficulties in adapting to the new rules for trading goods with the EU,  according to a British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) survey.
The survey also found that 77% of  respondents who exported were unable to identify any growth as a result of the  rule changes.
The post-Brexit trade deal, the trade and  co-operation agreement (TCA), sees British and EU businesses facing no tariffs  when sending goods in either direction.
However, there is extensive paperwork and  red tape, alongside difficulties in getting visas approved for staff (44%).
The BCC has sent the government a report  setting out the main issue the TCA is causing with solutions to many of the  problems.
These include reaching agreement on the  Northern Ireland Protocol and supplementary deals to reduce complexity for food  exporters and exempt smaller firms from VAT requirements.
Shevaun Haviland, Director General of the  British Chambers of Commerce, said:
'Businesses  want political leaders on both sides to move on from the debates of the past  and find ways to trade more freely.
'This  means an honest dialogue about how we can improve our trading relationship with  the EU. With a recession looming we must remove the shackles holding back our  exporters so they can play their part in the UK's economic recovery.
'If  we don't do this now then the long-term competitiveness of the UK could be  seriously damaged. It is no coincidence that during the first 15 months of the  TCA we stopped selling 42% of all the different products that we used to.
'Businesses  feel they are banging their heads against a brick wall as nothing has been done  to help them, almost two years after the TCA was first agreed. The longer the  current problems go unchecked, the more EU traders go elsewhere, and the more  damage is done.'
Internet  link: BCC website