Bloomberg: Fox says the US will likely be among Britain’s first trade deals after Brexit

01 October 2017

Britain is likely to forge its first post-Brexit trade deals with the US, Australia and New Zealand, International Trade Secretary Liam Fox said, declaring his department up to the task.

Britain is working to adopt about 40 free trade agreements that it’s currently party to as a member of the European Union and wants to have them in place before the U.K. leaves, Fox said at an event on the sidelines of the Conservative Party conference in Manchester, England.

“That’s particularly important for Switzerland and South Korea,” Fox said. “When it comes to the others -- which the first three look like the United States, Australia and New Zealand -- again, we have a lot of goodwill there,” he said. [...]

Fox said his department has had to ramp up hiring to complete all the necessary work on replicating the existing deals, and that negotiating three new agreements at any one time "is a lot to undertake."

Britain hasn’t negotiated its own trade deals since joining the EU more than four decades ago. Because of that lack of experience, the U.S. may not be the best country for Britain to start its post-Brexit trade agreements with, according to Adam Marshall, director general of the British Chambers of Commerce. "The U.S. trade representative is one of the best-oiled machines in the world," he said in August. President Donald Trump has said he would do a deal with the U.K.

Fox said U.S. trade discussions are advancing on four strands: 

Full article on Bloomberg


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