BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
Again, all I'll ask is why does any of this matter when we are compliant already?
Do you think that Apple makes a different iPhone for every regulatory system that they sell into?
The statement I queried was ‘in trade, rules do not matter’. They matter. International trade is governed by rules and legal agreements. The rules can apply to standards, quality, how you treat your workers etc. Canada now includes provisos over women’s rights.
On specific products a company in country x will make products compliant with the rules of the country it is exporting to. If it’s a large trade bloc or the US, smaller countries will often adopt the rules and standards of the more dominant bloc or country which means they do not have two sets of standards, one for domestic market and one for overseas markets, an unnecessary and costly duplication.
Even though the country now adopts the others rules the goods will still require documentation, checks etc because there is no legal agreement in force between the countries. To eliminate the need for documentation and checks the two countries may enter into a legal agreement in which country x agrees to adopt into domestic law the standards of the other country and agree to keep aligned in the future and eliminate the need for admin and checks.
This is what the EU does in harmonising standards and rules across all 30 countries and it exports these standards to other non EU countries. If a country legally opts out then it is outside the EU’s regulatory control and jurisdiction and is then subject to extra administration costs and custom checks even if a company’s goods are compliant with EU standards and regs.