Thursday 29 October 2020
Britain hailed its first major post-Brexit trade deal last week after signing an agreement with Japan that it said shows it can stand alone on the global stage. Photo: AFP

Britain hailed its first major post-Brexit trade deal last week after signing an agreement with Japan that it said shows it can stand alone on the global stage. This happened while talks on a pact with the European Union remain bogged down. London said the pact, which was agreed after just a few months of talks over the summer, would boost business between the two by £15.2 billion (US$19.5 billion) and proved others could be signed elsewhere.

The deal comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson pursues his “Global Britain” strategy that seeks potentially more advantageous trade deals than those that were negotiated while it was an EU member.

The UK-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement covers sectors including food, textiles and technology and largely replicates the existing EU-Japan arrangement, which will no longer apply to Britain at the end of this year. It is due to take effect on 1 January, the end of a transition period in which London and Brussels are trying to thrash out the terms of their own new relationship.

British-Japanese trade was worth around £30 billion last year, while Britain’s imports and exports to the European Union, its biggest trading partner, totalled US$670 billion.

After the signing ceremony in Tokyo, Britain’s International Trade Minister Elizabeth Truss said: “It used to be said that an independent UK would not be able to strike independent trade deals, or they would take years to conclude. But today we prove the naysayers wrong.” Truss also said the deal “paves the way” for Britain to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership between 11 countries including Canada, Mexico, Japan, Vietnam and Australia, though joining is likely to be a complex manoeuvre that will take years.

 

Britain’s International Trade Minister Elizabeth Truss is welcomed by Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama Photo: AFP

 

Source: AFP Relax News