Kuwait Times

Britain signs post-Brexit trade deal with Japan

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TOKYO: Britain hailed its first major post-Brexit trade deal Friday after signing an agreement with Japan that it said shows it can stand alone on the global stage, as talks on a pact with the European Union remain bogged down. London said the pact, which was agreed after just a few months of talks over the summer, would boost business between the two by £15.2 billion ($19.5 billion) and proved others could be signed elsewhere.

The deal comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson pursues his “Global Britain” strategy that seeks potentiall­y more advantageo­us trade deals than those that were negotiated while it was an EU member. The UK-Japan Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement covers sectors including food, textiles and technology and largely replicates the existing EU-Japan arrangemen­t, which will no longer apply to Britain at the end of this year.

It is due to take effect on January 1 — the end of a transition period in which London and Brussels are trying to thrash out the terms of their own new relationsh­ip.

British-Japanese trade was worth around £30 billion last year, while Britain’s imports and exports to the European Union, its biggest trading partner, totaled $670 billion. After the signing ceremony in Tokyo, Britain’s Internatio­nal Trade Minister Liz Truss said: “It used to be said that an independen­t UK would not be able to strike independen­t trade deals, or they would take years to conclude. But today we prove the naysayers wrong.”

Truss also said the deal “paves the way” for Britain to join the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p between 11 countries including Canada, Mexico, Japan, Vietnam and Australia. But joining is likely to be a complex manoeuvre that will take years. —AFP

 ??  ?? TOKYO: British Secretary of State for Internatio­nal Trade Elizabeth Truss (left) and Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama gather prior to their talks in Tokyo on Friday. —AFP
TOKYO: British Secretary of State for Internatio­nal Trade Elizabeth Truss (left) and Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama gather prior to their talks in Tokyo on Friday. —AFP

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