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Failure to strike a good Brexit deal in 2019 will push up prices in the shops, the British Retail Consortium has warned.

The trade body warned reverting to World Trade Organization (WTO) rules could see tariffs on clothes of up to 16% and on meat of up to 27%.

"Years of deflation" would mean retailers would have to pass these import costs on to consumers, it said.

It follows a similar warning from the CBI last week.

Other items singled out by the BRC include Chilean wine, where the BRC says tariffs would rise by 14%.

The BRC points out that as well as higher prices, some products, such as New Zealand lamb, are subject to EU import quotas, so could become cheaper outside the EU.

But it stresses that overall prices would rise and shopkeepers would struggle to absorb those higher prices.

Foreign workers

The fall in the value of the pound since the referendum, a trend that accelerated last week to leave the pound at its lowest against the dollar for 31 years and at five-year lows against the euro, already means any goods brought in from outside the UK will cost more.

The BRC argues that prices have been squeezed so low that profit margins are too small to be eroded further.

The BRC says reverting to WTO rules would result in the following cost increases:

The average duty on meat imports could be as high as 27%

Clothing and footwear would attract tariffs of 11-16% versus the current zero-rating for all EU imports

The import cost of women's clothing from Bangladesh would be 12% higher

Chilean wine would be 14% dearer for importers

However, many raw materials and semi-finished products would be zero-rated or attract rates of duty of below 10%

BRC chairman Richard Baker said: "The retail industry is the UK's biggest importer and has huge experience of importing from every corner of the world. We will be engaged in a constructive dialogue with government that will bring our experience to bear on the Brexit talks to the benefit of everyone in the UK."

The BRC and the CBI both warn of the unsettling effects of Brexit on foreign workers in the UK.

The BRC said it would be campaigning with other industry groups for an early end to the uncertainty facing EU workers.

It pointed out that the retail industry employs between 100,000 and 200,000 EU nationals, who, it says, make a huge contribution in every type of role from the boardroom to distribution centres and customer service and who, it says, deserve the reassurance that they will still be welcome here, whatever Brexit may bring.