• Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Business

May sets out terms for EU trade deal

By: JurmoloyaRava

PRIME MINISTER Theresa May said on Tuesday (19) she wanted an “ambitious” trade deal with the EU after Brexit as she chaired the first detailed cabinet discussion on fu­ture ties, her spokesman said.

She told ministers she wanted a “significantly more ambitious deal” than the EU’s recent trade agreement with Canada, even as the bloc’s chief negotiator warned any deal would not cover Britain’s dominant financial services sector.

The cabinet meeting came four days after EU leaders ap­proved an interim agreement on the terms of the separation, and agreed to move negotia­tions on to the next stage.

May wants Britain to leave the EU’s single market and customs union, but forge a new “deep and special economic partnership” with the bloc.

“The prime minister said it was clear what the cabinet’s objective was – a deal which secures the best possible trading terms with the EU, enables the UK to set rules that are right for our situation and facilitates ambitious third-country trade deals,” her spokesman said.

She ruled out replicating Norway’s membership of the European Economic Area, saying it would be “demo­cratically unsustainable, be­cause it would mean auto­matically adopting all EU rules without influence or a vote”, the spokesman said.

Instead, the prime minis­ter said she “would be seek­ing a significantly more am­bitious deal than the EU’s agreement with Canada”.

Officials have discussed the so-called “Canada plus” option, adding other eco­nomic sectors into the agree­ment.

However, the EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier warned on Tuesday that any deal would inevitably result in Britain’s banks and finan­cial companies losing rights to trade across the bloc.

“There is no place” for fi­nancial services, he told a British daily.

“There is not a single trade agreement that is open to fi­nancial services. It doesn’t exist,” Barnier added.

He said this was the conse­quence of Britain’s decisions, adding: “In leaving the single market, they lose the finan­cial services passport.”

May said Britain needed to be “creative in designing our proposal”, adding that the country “would be seeking a bespoke deal”.

However, no decisions have yet been taken and further government discussions are due “early in the New Year”, the spokesman said.

Some ministers favour continued alignment with EU rules after Brexit to main­tain a close trading relation­ship, while others say leaving the EU is an opportunity for Britain to forge a new path.

[TheChamp-Sharing]

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