Daily Nation Newspaper

UK starts talks to join Asia- Pacific free trade pact

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LONDON - Britain is to start negotiatio­ns to join a free trade area which could grant businesses access to “some of the biggest economies of the present and future”, the government has said.

The Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP) is made up of 11 nations, including Australia, Canada and Japan.

Membership would reduce tariffs on exports such as cars and whisky.

The trade area covers a market of around 500 million people. New Zealand, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam are also founder members of the trade agreement, which was establishe­d in 2018. The UK applied to join the bloc in January following Brexit.

Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss said the trade area was the “part of the world where Britain’s greatest opportunit­ies lie.”

Being granted membership would be a “glittering post-Brexit prize that I want us to seize,” she said.

Truss said membership would help “farmers, makers and innovators sell to some of the biggest economies of the present and future, but without ceding control over our laws, borders or money.”

However, there has already been a political backlash against the UK’s recently agreed free trade deal with Australia. UK farmers say imports from Australia could undercut them on price and undermine welfare standards.

The UK is the first non-founding country to apply to join the CPTPP and would be its second biggest economy after Japan, if negotiatio­ns succeed.

The free trade agreement aims to reduce trade tariffs - a form of border tax - between member countries and includes a promise to eliminate or reduce 95 percent of charges on traded goods. – BBC.

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