…As U.S., UK launch video trade talks, pledge quick work in post-Brexit era***
Britain has overtaken Italy as the worst-hit country in Europe by the novel coronavirus, according to the latest official figures released on Tuesday.
Chairing Tuesday’s Downing Street press briefing, Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, said another 693 COVID-19 patients have died, bringing the total coronavirus-related death toll in Britain to 29,427.
The figures include deaths in all settings, including hospitals, care homes and the wider community.
Earlier in the day, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) published its latest coronavirus-registered death figures, showing the total death toll has passed 32,000, making Britain the worst-hit country in Europe followed by Italy.
The coronavirus-related death toll in Italy currently stands at 29,315.
in another development, the U.S. and Britain on Tuesday launched the first round of negotiations for a free trade agreement, with their trade representatives pledging to work quickly online to reach a deal that will “significantly boost trade and investment.”
The talks, to be conducted virtually, will involve over 300 U.S. and UK staff and officials in nearly 30 negotiating groups, U.S. Trade Representative, Robert Lighthizer, and UK Trade Minister, Liz Truss, said in a joint statement.
“We will undertake negotiations at an accelerated pace and have committed the resources necessary to progress at a fast pace,’’ they said.
“A Free Trade Agreement would contribute to the long-term health of our economies, which is vitally important as we recover from the challenges posed by COVID-19,’’ the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.
It will be Washington’s first major new trade negotiation in 2020.
Also read: North leads, as NCDC’s 245 new COVID-19 cases surge infections to 2802
London has also been working out trade terms with the European Union following its exit from the block in January.
Both countries are trying to shore up domestic supply chains as they grapple with the effects of the coronavirus crisis.
Lighthizer has named the UK trade talk one of the Trump administration’s top priorities for 2020.
He published objectives more than a year ago that sought full access for U.S. agricultural products and reduced tariffs for U.S. manufactured goods.
Republican U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said he hopes a trade deal with the UK lays the groundwork for an improved deal with the EU.
“All I’m hoping to do is if we get a good deal with the UK on agriculture, it’s going to embarrass Europe,’’ Grassley told reporters on a conference call.
The Trump administration is looking to shift supply chains back to the U.S. and away from China, where the novel coronavirus originated and is pushing a “Buy American” campaign for medical and other supplies.
Agriculture is expected to be among the thorniest issues in the talks, given the strong British opposition to the U.S. genetically modified crops and antibacterial treatments for poultry.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has vowed to drive a “hard bargain” and Truss has said that Britain would not diminish its food safety standards.
The top American business lobby, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, on Monday urged the two historic allies to eliminate all tariffs, saying that would boost the long-term outlook for both countries at a time when their economies have been hard hit by shutdowns aimed at curbing the spread of COVID-19.
The chamber said the two countries also could strengthen global trade rules to deal with challenges posed by non-market economies such as China.
Trade in goods between the U.S. and UK was valued at $127.1 billion in 2018, with the two sides roughly in balance, while the services trade topped $134.8 billion. Britain is the seventh-largest U.S. goods trading partner, after South Korea, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Ted Bromund, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, said one area ripe for tariff reduction was in the automotive trade, Britain’s largest export sector to the U.S.
The U.S. passenger car tariffs are 2.5 per cent, with pickup truck tariffs at 25 per cent, while Britain maintains a 10 per cent car tariff.
Truss said a trade deal would make it even easier for the two allies to do business “across the pond’’.
“We want to strike an ambitious deal that opens up new opportunities for our businesses, brings in more investment and creates better jobs for people across the whole of the country,’’ she said in the joint statement.
An opening plenary kicked off the negotiations on Tuesday, to be followed by multiple virtual meetings from May 6 to May 15.
Further rounds of talks will take place approximately every six weeks and will be carried out remotely until it is safe to travel, the UK embassy said.
Grassley said he thinks the talks will be more difficult via video conference.
“It seems to me it’s not as quite good as sitting across the table from them,’’ he said.