Western Mail

‘10 free ports across UK will create thousands of jobs after Brexit’

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POST-BREXIT free ports will create “thousands of jobs” as part of the UK’s future trade arrangemen­ts, the Internatio­nal Trade Secretary has claimed.

Ahead of a visit to Teeside, Liz Truss said the Government plans to create “the world’s most advanced free port model” as soon as possible.

Free ports are areas inside the UK geographic­ally, but legally outside of the UK customs territory.

Once the UK leaves the EU, seaports and airports across the UK will be invited to bid to become one of up to 10 free ports with the aspiration of increasing trade with new markets across the world.

Ms Truss said free ports would use onshore enterprise and manufactur­ing as the “gateway to our future prosperity, creating thousands of jobs”.

“We will have a truly independen­t trade policy after we leave the EU on October 31,” she added.

However, Labour said free ports represent “a race to the bottom that will have money launderers and tax dodgers rubbing their hands with glee”.

Shadow internatio­nal trade secretary Barry Gardiner said: “Freeports and free enterprise zones risk companies shutting up shop in one part of the country in order to exploit tax breaks elsewhere, and, worst of all, lower employment rights.

“The British people did not vote for this new administra­tion and they certainly did not vote to see their jobs and livelihood­s threatened in favour of gifting further tax breaks to big companies and their bosses.”

In his first speech as Prime Minister on the steps of 10 Downing Street,

Boris Johnson said free ports would provide thousands of jobs for people in “left-behind areas”.

During the Tory leadership campaign, Mr Johnson pledged to create “about six” free ports.

The new Brexit-supporting Chief Secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak wrote a paper in November 2016 on free ports for the Centre for Policy Studies think tank, which was co-founded by Margaret Thatcher.

In the document, Mr Sunak wrote: “Goods can be imported, manufactur­ed or re-exported inside the Free Trade Zone without incurring domestic customs duties or taxes.

“These are only paid - often at reduced rates – on goods entering the domestic economy.”

Yesterday, Mr Sunak said: “We are exploring free ports as an innovative way to drive growth and support thousands of high-skilled jobs across the UK.

“We will focus on those areas that could benefit the most, as we look to boost investment and opportunit­y for communitie­s across the country.”

The Department for Internatio­nal Trade will also launch a Free Ports Advisory Panel which will include ministers from the Department for Internatio­nal Trade and the Treasury.

Panellists include David Cameron’s former special adviser Daniel Korski, who last year wrote in an article for City AM that a no-deal Brexit would be “disastrous” for technology firms.

Also on the panel is small business champion Emma Jones, who coordinate­d an open letter alongside 68 other business owners which warned that no deal would be a “disaster” for small companies.

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