Agreement offers more for its symbolism than what Britain stands to gain economically

The international trade secretary, Liz Truss, said it was a historic moment and in a way it was. For the first time since leaving the EU, Britain has struck a free trade deal and with the world’s third biggest economy – Japan – at that.

In practical terms, the agreement is small beer. On the government’s own estimates, the impact will be to boost the size of the UK economy by £1.5bn. Given that Britain’s annual output is about £2tn, that represents less than 0.1% of gross domestic product. What’s more, it will take time for the benefits to show up.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

No 10 launches gender equality plan but critics call it a ‘drop in the ocean’

Foreign secretary’s new strategy branded ‘meaningless’ in face of parliamentary inquiry into…

Modern, multicultural and surprisingly liberal: this is the real ‘red wall’ | John Harris

It’s wrong to stereotype Labour’s lost heartlands. They have more in common…

Big opportunity, little interest: New Zealand struggles to fill dream job protecting wildlife

The Department of Conservation is looking for a biodiversity supervisor on the…