Free lunch: One market, indivisible
Non-British observers, such as the FT’s Wolfgang Münchau, generally take the trade-off as axiomatic. So do most of the politicians and civil servants with whom Britain will have to negotiate. The implication is obvious, and Münchau agrees with Free Lunch and the Centre for European Reform’s John Springford that it’s a choice between a Norway-style model and free trade in goods only.