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Tuesday 10 January 2017 1:00 am

Former Australian PM backs plan to target Commonwealth nations for trade deals

By: Mark Sands

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A new paper backed by former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott is calling on the UK to quit the EU's customs union and focus on Commonwealth trade after Brexit.

The report, authored by Tory Braintree MP James Cleverly, suggests a five step approach to Britain's trade priorities, beginning with the Commonwealth’s open economies.

After setting up “easy win” deals with Australia, Canada, Singapore and New Zealand in time for Brexit in 2019, the UK should pivot to negotiations with India, before deals with the Commonwealth nations of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific.

Finally, Cleverly said the UK should join the Trade in Service Agreement, a US-EU-Australian deal with is geared towards services.

Read More: Hammond visits Gulf to bolster UK's Middle East charm offensive

Endorsing the proposals, Abbott said: “The best way to ensure that free trade has few losers, even in the short term, is to begin with much freer trade between likeminded countries with comparable standards of living.

“Free trade agreements with economically advanced Commonwealth countries are the obvious place for Britain to start.”

The paper also suggests that any trade negotiations should also be accompanied by liberal visa reforms, to protect access to talent.

Read More: Liam Fox hints at Turkey-style relationship with the EU

In addition, it demands a new white paper on trade and investment to provide government departments with a single plan from which to work.

Cleverly said: “The government must a publish a plan to utilise the 'Commonwealth advantage' and build our trade links with the Commonwealth. A market of 2.3 billion people and some of the fastest growing economies in the world is too big an opportunity to ignore.”

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