Unless I have missed something,I think you are going in the wrong direction.
Brexit has caused the £ to weaken against the Euro,or perhaps better said that the Euro is now strong against the pound. So if you lived in the south you should be able to buy a cheaper e-bike in Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland has always been competitively priced.
This is causing problems for Irish vendors,especially those located near the border with the north,the Irish are travelling across the border to buy goods very cheaply.
In theory after Brexit the hard border should be reintroduced to stop cross border trading,remember the homing pigs. But the reintroduction of a border would be politically difficult.
Our government with the agreement of the Irish government are considering treating the whole of Ireland remaining in the EU,the border at the point of entry but that would not be palatable to unionists living in Northern Ireland.
I think I have analysed the situation correctly but stand to be corrected.
Just one of the little problems that May and Co have to sort out during Brexit negotiations.
KudosDave
Hi kudosDave, you are not mistaken. I live close to the border with N I in the republic and did take advantage of the major improvement in the euro sterling rate to purchase my Motus in Lisburn ( just south of Belfast). Currency differentials and getting bargains are fleeting things in a tribal market . The cost of piece part imports E.g the Bosch motor and battery will increase in sterling terms and even if Raliegh can make the frame cheaper, the overall product will rise in cost as soon as current inventory is rundown.
Try as I might I cannot see any upside to Brexit for anyone in Europe either the UK or elsewhere. As a non UK citizen, I am hesitant to comment on what might be seen as an internal political matter, but sometimes outsiders can see things more clearly.
The EU is weakened, the UK is weakened , the unity between the parts of the UK particularly Scotland and NI and the rest (England & Whales) is damaged.
We in Ireland are very worried as to how a border can be managed. Since it is 15km from me, I am worried. I am not convinced that a soft border will long endure. , Even though this is what is being discussed and hoped for.
The only hope at present is that nothing has happened and therefore nothing needs to be done except to confirm the wish of the UK by holding another referendum. I n this, if nothing else I would agree with Tony Blair.
A referendum result of 17/ 16 is was to close to call . And in my opinion was a dead heat . It certainly was not an overwhelming call to action.
There is a certain irony in the fact that Ireland with a population of 4.5 M opted to join the EEC in order to reduce our economic dependence on a market of 45M( the then UK) and the fact that the UK is choosing to leave a market of 450M for the reverse reason.
Should the UK persist in this action they might consider the placing of the hard border along the lines of Hadrian's wall.