Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How Brexit helps ‘the least of these’
How Brexit helps ‘the least of these’
Nov 22, 2025 11:22 AM

Brexit may suffer from the most uniquely invertedpublic perception in modern international affairs. The British referendum to leave the European Union – the most successful rebellion against global governanceto date – is depicted as a racist and xenophobic retreat into an isolated and atomized existence.In fact, it is only Brexit that allows the UK to leave behind Brussels’ schedule ofsubsidies and tariffs that deny developing nations access to the world’s largest market,setting millions on a path to independence and self-sufficiency.

Brexit gives the UK the power to engage entrepreneurs in the developing world, alleviating poverty and allowing domestic industries and cultures to thrive,writes Fr. Peter Farrington in a new essay atReligion & Liberty Transatlantic.

The UK has announced it will pursue numerous post-Brexit free trade agreements.Fr. Farrington details how the Global South already plansto benefit from the UK’s newly independent status in “Brexit: For the life of the world”:

Sarah Logan, an economist with the International Growth Centre, reports that exports from Africa to the EU have increased from €85 billion (approximately $92 billion U.S.) in 2004 to €150 billion in 2014 ($163 billion), and that Africa is beginning to organise itself into trade blocs that are able to negotiate more effectively. She also considers that the fact that Britain will need to negotiate new agreements with developing nations and trade blocs in the Third World will lead to fairer and more equitable relationships with the UK. Brexit e at the right time for Africa and other developing regions. She says that Brexit, and other developments have “the potential to significantly expand trade and economic growth in Africa.”

Fr. Farrington notes that former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smithraised the tie between EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), poverty, and European resistance to mass immigrationduring a recent visit to the Heritage Foundation:

“The solution to African migration is not to lock people out but to help them build prosperity in their own countries through open markets,” he said. These free and open markets have not been provided by the EU, and the UK’s membership in the EU has required us to adopt trade relations with developing regions that are not to their advantage.

He cites the case of green beans which are a major product of the Kenyan economy but which face a 17 percent tariff when imported into the EU, making them less petitive than the subsidised beans produced in Spain and Italy. EU protectionism harms developing economies and peoples. Duncan Smith says, “The UK has long believed that trade is the best form of aid.”

Presumably, trade agreements with the UK – for now, the largest economy of any EU member state– could give Africans greater leverage in dealing with Brussels. At a minimum, it will create new markets for its products.

The UK and India hope tostrike a new free trade dealas soon as the UK legally exits the EU. New Delhi’s longing for closer economic ties with its former imperial ruler points to another aspect of free trade: Itcan develop positive foreign relationson a global scale. But, bearing out Adam Smith’s famous observation, each desires greater economic access for its own economic benefit. India has substantially more to gain in its quest to aid its 194 million hungry citizens and 360 million people below the global poverty level.

“People of faith should care about this if they value the Lord’s injunction to care for the poor,” Fr. Farrington writes before quoting Pope John Paul II on the importance of trade for underdeveloped nations. mentary shows binationof Britain’s independence and free markets have the power to unleash human potential and feed an impoverished world.

You can read his full essay, “Brexit: For the life of the world,” here.

Warren. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Family in Decline: How Should Christians Respond?
As Christianity loses influence in the West, and as culture corresponds by taking itscues from the idols of hedonism, it can be easy to forget that most of these challenges are not new. In an article for Leadership Journal, Ryan Hoselton highlights theserecurring “crises,” pondering whatlessons we might learn from Christian responses of ages past. On the topic of family, and more specifically, family in decline, Hoselton points to Herman Bavinck’s The Christian Family,whichtakes aim attherange of threats tothe family...
How Foreign Aid Can Keep Poor Countries in Poverty
Giving foreign aid directly to poor countries may end up keeping those countries poor. For most readers of this blog and others associated with the Acton Institute this claim will be neither surprising nor controversial. Indeed, it’s been a core assumption behind our work on PovertyCure. But until recently, many Americans would have found the idea to be counter-intuitive, if not obviously wrong. But thanks to the work of the Angus Deaton, the recent winner of the Nobel prize in...
Video: Wayne Schmidt On Vitality In Pastoral Ministry
For the past few years, the Acton Institute has hosted a Pastor Appreciation event for clergy in and around the Grand Rapids, Michigan area.This year’s Pastor Appreciation Day here at Acton took place last week Thursday, October 15th, in the Mark Murray Auditorium, and featured an address by Wayne Schmidt, Vice President of Wesley Seminary and former pastor of Kentwood Community Church. Schmidt focused his remarks on the dangers of pastoral burnout, and on the essential elements of pastoral vitality....
Samuel Gregg: A New View Of Natural Law
At Public Discourse, Samuel Gregg (Acton’s director of research) discusses Adam Macleod’s Property and Practical Reason, which Gregg says attempts to rethink this key element of economic liberty and renews “the manner in which natural law scholars have traditionally addressed this topic.” Gregg first outlines classical reflections on natural law. Then, he offers what he sees as Macleod’s insights: In addition to drawing on new natural law theory (of which he provides one of the most accessible explanations that I’ve...
Zambia Asks God to Save Their Currency
Will God save the kwacha? The Zambian kwacha—what some are currently calling the “world’s worst currency”—has been falling against the dollar for most of the past year. This currency crisis prompted Zambian President Edgar Lungu to call for a national day of prayer and fasting last Sunday. “I personally believe that since we humbled ourselves and cried out to God, the Lord has heard our cry,” Lungu said in an address on Sunday. “I appeal to all of you to...
How Should Christians Think About Socialism?
Calling a political candidatea “socialist” used to be a political slur. In almost every U.S. election over the past hundred years there have been conservatives who have claimed a major political party candidate running for president was—whether they admitted it or not—a socialist. But our latest presidential race includes someone who calls himself a socialist, Bernie Sanders. Faced with the prospect, albeit unlikely, that an avowed socialist may actually e the Democrat’s nominee for president, many apolitical Christians are asking...
Samuel Gregg: Why Does The Left Keep Winning?
In today’s American Spectator, Acton’s Director of Research Samuel Gregg notes that left-wing politicians, supporters of socialism, and social engineers seem to have taken over – not just in American politics, but globally. Why? Gregg suggests three reasons: One abiding cause of the left’s on-going ascendency, I’d suggest, is that the visible weakening of orthodox religion throughout the West. As the 20th century Jesuit theologian Henri de Lubac observed, liberalized forms of Judaism and Christianity don’t involve abandonment of a...
Audio: Samuel Gregg On Conscience And The Catholic Church
Acton Institute Director of Research Samuel Gregg joins host Drew Mariani on Relevant Radio’s The Drew Mariani Showto discuss the important issue of conscience: what is it, and how should Roman Catholics in particular approach difficult moral issues in their day to day life? You can listen to the interview via the audio player below. ...
What’s the Real Problem with Payday Loans?
Since its inception in the 1990s, the payday lending industry has grown at an astonishing pace. Currently, there are about 22,000 payday lending locations—more than two for every Starbucks—that originate an estimated $27 billion in annual loan volume. Christians and others worriedabout the poor tend to be very fortable with this industry. While there may be forms of payday lending that are ethical, the concern is that most such lending is predatory, and that the industry takes advantage of the...
Raw Craft: The Art of Bookmaking and the Glory of Craftsmanship
Throughout itshistory, the American economy has transitioned from agrarian to industrial to information-driven. Given ournewfound status, manual labor is increasingly cast down in the popular imagination, replaced by white-collar jobs, bachelor’s degrees, and ladder-climbing. Whether due to new avenues and opportunities or a more general distaste for the slow and mundane, work with the hands is either ignored or discouraged, both asvocational prospect andconsumeristic priority. Amid this sea of new efficiencies, the art of craftsmanship is at a particular disadvantage....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved