Published 17:23 IST, February 6th 2020
UK hopes to strike early free trade agreement with Australia after Brexit
As the current trade between UK and Australia was worth £18.3billion in 2019, Britain is now aiming an early trade deal with the island country after Brexit.
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British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab visited Australia as a part of his first overseas trip since the UK officially left the European Union and met with Australian foreign secretary Marise Payne. As the current trade between UK and Australia was worth £18.3billion in 2019, Britain is now aiming an early trade deal with the island country while it still remains in an 11-month transition period with the EU.
Raab arrived in Australia on February 6 as a part of a four-country visit to the Asia-Pacific region and discussed the future trade and investment opportunities along with the scope of an early free trade deal. While British FM called the UK to be the 'natural partner' of Australia, Payne said her country is 'ready to seize the opportunity of the new era'.
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UK, Australia has 'unique friendship'
Ahead of his visit to Australia, Raab had said that both the UK and Australia have 'unique friendship' because of sharing common values. Now that the UK will be identified as the third country. Britain has the chance to 'broaden its horizons' and embrace the opportunities. The British FM is also scheduled to meet Australian Prime Minister, Scott Morrison. Being the members of the Commonwealth, Britain and Australia are considered close partners on the international stage.
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In the same visit, according to the official release by the British government, Raab will also arrive in Sydney to meet business leaders along with the people involved in the response of deadly unprecedented bushfires that have rocked the country for several months. Other countries where the British FM will visit include, Japan, Singapore, and Malaysia.
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Johnson demands free trade without EU rules
While Raab is pitching free trade agreements in Indo-Pacific region, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has made the stage clear for a trade agreement with the European Union which shall be negotiated by the end of the transition period. Johnson stressed the need for a 'comprehensive free-trade agreement' similar to the 'Canada-style' agreement with the EU. He further denied settling into any trade accord which would require the UK to follow bloc's rules. Instead, British PM says that 'EU should be obliged' to follow Britain's rules as according to him, Britain is doing 'better' than the 27-nation-bloc in many ways.
The British PM said, “There is no need for a free-trade agreement to involve accepting EU rules on competition, policies, subsidies, social protection of environment or anything similar, any more than EU should be obliged to accept UK rules. The UK will maintain the highest and better standards in these areas than those of the EU without the compulsion of a treaty.”
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17:23 IST, February 6th 2020