The Pak Banker

UK PM seeks post-Brexit deals at Africa summit

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets 16 African leaders at an investment summit Monday that will see Britain cast out a net for trading partners in its new life outside the EU. The first UK-Africa Investment Summit in London comes less than two weeks before Britain formally ends its decades-long involvemen­t in the European integratio­n project.

It also follows a tour of subSaharan Africa former prime minister Theresa May made in 2018 the first by a UK leader in five years. The 16 leaders from 21 attending African countries include presidents Abdel Fattah al-Sisi of Egypt and Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and Ghanaian leader Nana Akufo-Addo will also attend. Johnson will tell the African leaders and big company executives that he wants to make Britain their "investment partner of choice," Downing Street said.

He is also expected to announce an end to Britain's support for thermal coal mining and coal power plants overseas. "UK aid is tackling climate change and supporting women entreprene­urs," Britain's Internatio­nal

Developmen­t Secretary Alok Sharma said in statement.

"Africa's economic potential is huge, with eight of the world's 15 fastest growing economies and a population set to double to over two billion by 2050," said Sharma. "We have much to offer African nations." o Growing risk appetite -

The British government's export agency reports providing £2 billion ($2.6 billion) in financing for UK company exports to Africa in the past two years.

The agency says it now wants to "increase its risk appetite" in Egypt and the fast-growing economies in

Nigeria and Rwanda.

The UK government said the London summit will see British and African firms announce commercial deals worth £6.5 billion.

It did not spell out whether these were all firm commitment­s or included memorandum­s of understand­ing that do not always result in actual deals.

Britain will formally leave European Union on January 31.

Brussels and London will then have just 11 months to reach a new free trade agreement that can preserve frictionle­ss trade between Europe's single market and one of its largest

the economies.

Johnson's government says it wants to diverge away from the EU economy in the future-even at the expense of some of its producers facing trade tariffs and quotas as a result.

London believes that this would give Britain a better chance at reaching its own agreements with growing nations outside Europe.

UK finance minister Sajid Javid said in an interview with the Financial Times published on Saturday that "there will not be alignment" with the EU once the postBrexit transition period shuts at the end of the year.

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