US and UK working on 'very substantial' trade deal

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,933
1,910
113
US President Donald Trump has said talks about a "very substantial" trade deal with the UK are under way.

He said a bilateral post-Brexit deal could lead to a "three to four, five times" increase in current trade.

There are no details about how this would be achieved.

After a phone call with Boris Johnson on Friday, Mr Trump said the new prime minister would be "great". He added US-UK trade had previously been "impeded" by Britain's membership of the EU.

Trump: US and UK working on 'very substantial' trade deal


BBC News
27 July 2019


Mr Trump says he and Mr Johnson will create a "substantial" US-UK trade agreement

US President Donald Trump has said talks about a "very substantial" trade deal with the UK are under way.

He said a bilateral post-Brexit deal could lead to a "three to four, five times" increase in current trade.

There are no details about how this would be achieved.

After a phone call with Boris Johnson on Friday, Mr Trump said the new prime minister would be "great". He added US-UK trade had previously been "impeded" by Britain's membership of the EU.

Once the UK leaves, he said, the UK can expect to do "much more" trade with the US, he said.

Mr Johnson and Mr Trump said they would begin formal negotiations "as soon as possible" after the UK leaves the EU.

While the UK is in the EU, it cannot sign its own trade deals. Brexit is due to happen on 31 October.

What is a trade deal?

Trade deals involve two or more countries agreeing a set of terms by which they buy and sell goods and services from each other.

Deals are designed to increase trade by eliminating or reducing trade barriers. These barriers might include import or export taxes (tariffs), quotas, or differing regulations on things such as safety or labelling.

Why don't the US and UK already have a trade deal?

In short, because the US and EU do not have one.

The EU customs union forbids members negotiating trade agreements separately from the EU. Instead, trade agreements are negotiated collectively.

In 2013, under President Barack Obama, the US and the EU launched a programme of negotiations known as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, or TTIP.

That proposed trade agreement was put on hold by the US after Mr Trump was elected as president, but the EU has approved new talks.

How long could a US-UK trade deal take to agree?


A trade deal between the EU and a bloc of South American countries, including Brazil, took 20 years to finalise

The EU-Canada agreement - which removed 99% of tariffs - was seven years in the making, while the EU-South America deal agreed in June took 20 years to negotiate.

The EU and US have been having a stop-start conversation about trade for years but a fresh round of formal talks were only recently approved by the EU.

So even though both Mr Trump and Mr Johnson seem keen to do a deal, it could still take years, although - in theory - it is easier to negotiate with one country than a multi-national bloc.

Barack Obama said in 2016 a UK-US trade deal could take 10 years to negotiate if the UK left the EU.

How much is US-UK trade worth at the moment?

The US is a major trade and investment partner for the UK - by some measures the biggest of all.

According to the Office for National Statistics' latest available figures, the US (including Puerto Rico) is our top trading partner.

Total trade (imports and exports) between the UK and US was worth £183.2bn in 2017, which made up 14.6% of total UK trade.

The Office of the United States Trade Representative estimated the total trade figure for 2018 at $262.3bn (£211.9bn).

The US Chamber of Commerce says the UK is the US' seventh largest trading partner and the fourth largest export destination for American goods and services.

What trade deals has the UK done so far?


The UK-Swiss agreement signed in February also applies to neighbouring Liechtenstein

As a member of the EU, the UK is part of about 40 trade agreements the EU has with more than 70 countries.

If the UK leaves the EU without a deal it would lose these trade deals immediately - worth about 11% of total UK trade.

So far the UK has agreed "continuity" deals with 12 countries and regions: Central America, Andean countries, Norway and Iceland, Caribbean countries, Pacific Islands, Liechtenstein , Israel, Palestinian Authority, Switzerland, the Faroe Islands, Eastern and Southern Africa and Chile.

These areas account for 64% of trade currently covered by EU agreements for which the UK is seeking continuity, the government says. The agreements mostly replicate EU trade deals.

In addition, the UK has also announced a deal in principle with South Korea, which is "expected to be signed shortly".

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-49135045
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,933
1,910
113
'I will pave the way for post-Brexit trade deal with US': Dominic Raab reveals he will fly to Washington within WEEKS to step up negotiations and says 'Brussels isn't the only game in town'


The new Foreign Secretary (right) has warned the EU that Britain will step up trade negotiations with the US and others before the October deadline. Mr Raab, who is also the new Deputy Prime Minister, said it would be the EU's choice 'if we've left on WTO terms' on October 31. His warning came after Mr Johnson and Donald Trump (left) agreed Brexit offered an 'unparalleled opportunity' to boost economic ties between the two nations.
 
Last edited:

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Reading between the lines is allowed when they publish something that is propaganda. Just how it is done is worth posting. With Nikki at the UN she got the crimes and location and emotions right every-time. She also got the real criminals wrong every single time.