Boris Johnson ‘will threaten the US and EU with sky high tariffs to speed up post-Brexit trade deals’
BORIS Johnson plans to threaten the US and EU with high tariffs to speed up post-Brexit trade deals.
The Prime Minister is discussing plans with the Cabinet to use tariffs on goods as "leverage" in trade negotiations this week.
It means some goods - such as French cheese and German cars - could see sky-high hikes of up to 30 per cent, reports.
Boris hopes the move will pile pressure on the EU to agree to a quota-free trade agreement without forcing the UK to follow Brussels' rules.
In the EU Exit Strategy (XS) Committee meeting held on Thursday, ministers agreed the tariffs should be put out for consultation.
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It is likely the UK will mostly replicate the EU tariff schedule, which will be published and lodged at the World Trade Organisation.
MPs have also agreed to prioritise Japan, US, Australia and New Zealand as "tier one" countries in negotiations.
Other countries where deals are predicted to take longer will become "tier two".
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s aides have told No10 he wants a deal as soon as possible after initially being cold about Brexit.
What does the UK import from the EU?
THE EU is the UK's largest trading partner, according to a January 2019 House of Commons briefing paper.
In 2017, the EU accounted for 53 per cent of imports and 44 per cent of UK exports.
But the share of all UK imports from the EU has fallen from a high of 58 per cent in 2002.
These are the goods were imported in 2017:
- Cars were the UK’s single largest import from the EU in 2017, valued at £47billion and making up 18.1 per cent of all UK goods imports from the EU (and 83 per cent of all UK imports of road vehicles)
- Medicinal and pharmaceutical products - 7.9 per cent
- Electrical machinery and appliances - 4.4 per cent
- Miscellaneous manufactured articles - 4.1 per cent
- Telecomms & sound recording equipment - 3.8 per cent
- General industrial machinery - 3.8 per cent
- Power generating machinery - 3 per cent
- Office machines and automated data processing machines - 2.9 per cent
- Vegetables & fruit - 2.7 per cent
- Petroleum and petroleum products - 2.6 per cent
Boris now hopes to strike the deal ahead of one with the US and EU to show how quickly Brexit Britain can move.
The XS committee meets again next Thursday to thrash out tricky details of the negotiations, such as how flexible the UK is prepared to be on agricultural products.
And Boris will set out the negotiating plan in the first week of February - with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin saying yesterday he wants to conclude a trade deal with Britain this year.
The PM yesterday signed Britain's EU divorce deal - officially bringing an end to the Brexit saga.
He declared it a "fantastic moment" as he put pen to paper to seal the deal at Downing Street.
Boris added he hoped it "brings to an end to far too many years of argument and division" after the Withdrawal Agreement finally passed through parliament this week.
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The leaders of the EU's top two institutions also signed the papers as the UK prepares to divorce Europe.
And almost four years after Brits voted for Brexit, the Withdrawal Agreement Bill formally became a law after the Queen gave it Royal Assent.
It ends one of the most bitter sagas in British politics — a battle over the shape of the exit deal that has raged since Theresa May triggered Article 50 on March 29, 2017.