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Commonweal­th eyes post-Brexit trade boost

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LONDON: With Britain on the brink of triggering its EU exit talks, the country and its historic trading partners in the Commonweal­th are sizing up an opportunit­y to boost business.

Members in the 52-state organizati­on, which was born out of the British Empire, feel the time is right to exploit their common bonds of language and law to a much greater degree.

Britain is gearing up to strike its own trade deals outside of the European single market and is looking to its former global network, in what skeptical London officials quoted in UK newspapers are calling “Empire 2.0.”

The Commonweal­th can help strengthen the prosperity and security of the UK and other members “as we look to create a truly global Britain,” Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement to mark Commonweal­th Day on Monday.

Ahead of the celebratio­ns, the body held its first trade ministers’ meeting since 2005.

“A number of countries have come to us as a result of their con- cern in relation to the impact that Brexit might have on their economic position,” Commonweal­th SecretaryG­eneral Patricia Scotland said afterwards.

“The challenge that we face globally — the slowdown and the protection­ism — is a real one. Therefore, the Commonweal­th as a family has an opportunit­y to exploit... the de facto Commonweal­th advantage.”

The trade ministers’ meeting heard how business between Commonweal­th members stands at around £600 billion ($730 billion), equivalent to 15 percent of global trade even though member states account for a third of the global population.

The gathering looked at overcoming challenges to trade competitiv­eness and practical steps to get more commerce flowing.

“I think it is the right time for a new Commonweal­th trading bloc,” Sri Lanka’s Internatio­nal Trade Minister Malik Samarawick­rama told AFP.

The Commonweal­th Enterprise and Investment Council’s (CEIC) Chairman Jonathan Marland said: “All the UK’s trading arrangemen­ts are now up for grabs. So what easier and better place to trade than with countries who have shared associatio­ns for many years?”

When Britain joined the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, it sidelined its historic trading links with its former empire, causing much hurt in some countries.

Though Britain is “pushing at an open door,” with Commonweal­th trade, it must “approach it with a degree of humility,” Marland said.

Malta is uniquely placed to read the shifting sands, chairing both the Commonweal­th and the EU Council presidency.

“Brexit has had an effect and this is felt very handsomely,” said the Mediterran­ean island’s Economy Minister Christian Cordona.

“However, it gives also a lot of opportunit­ies that did not exist before,” he said.

The Overseas Developmen­t Institute (ODI) think tank, along with Britain’s All-Party Parliament­ary Group on Trade Out of Poverty (APPG-TOP), produced a 10-point plan of possible measures to increase Commonweal­th business.

Their recommenda­tions included a Commonweal­th trademark, promoting green growth through trade and improving trade governance.

But ODI senior research fellow Maximilian­o Mendez-Parra said the intra-Commonweal­th trade growth should not be overstated since Africa sees China as its key partner.

“Probably there will be an increase in intra-Commonweal­th trade, but it will not go back to the trade of 60 or 70 years ago,” he told AFP.

Pauline Schnapper, a professor of contempora­ry British civilizati­on at the Sorbonne University in Paris, said London was failing to acknowledg­e how much the world and Britain’s place in it had moved on since it decolonize­d and joined the EEC.

“Half of Britain’s trade is with the European continent so the idea that that could be replaced by Australia and New Zealand is absurd,” she said.

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