Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

EU referendum: European Union trade deals will bring in £20bn for Britain, report says

Exclusive: The figure is a fillip to the Britain Stronger in Europe campaign, which is promoting an In vote 

Mark Leftly
Deputy Political Editor
Sunday 25 October 2015 23:39 GMT
Comments
Anna Soubry: ‘Insufficient evidence to warrant enforcement action’ (Re
Anna Soubry: ‘Insufficient evidence to warrant enforcement action’ (Re (Rex)

Britain’s income will be boosted by £20bn through concluded and future international trade deals that have been brokered by the European Union, according to the business department.

In a written Parliamentary question, Labour MP Emma Reynolds asked what the benefit had been to the UK economy of preferential trade agreements the EU has negotiated with countries outside the bloc.

Business Minister Anna Soubry replied: “The cumulative impact of all concluded, ongoing and potential trade negotiations currently being undertaken by the EU could boost UK GDP by over £20bn in the long run.”

The figure is a fillip to the Britain Stronger in Europe campaign, which is promoting an In vote to settle the UK’s future EU membership. With the referendum due by 2017, recent polls suggest the In and Out campaigns are running a statistical dead heat.

The two “Brexit” groups, Vote Leave and Leave.EU, believe Britain could organise superior trade deals with other countries and trading areas if it left the bloc. But the Parliamentary answer suggests the UK has benefited from deals negotiated centrally by Brussels, and would miss out if it left the EU. Ms Reynolds, a Europhile who was shadow communities and local government secretary until Jeremy Corbyn became Labour leader last month, told The Independent: “The UK’s membership of the EU gives us access to other markets around the world on better terms than we could negotiate if we go it alone.

“The EU single market has 500 million consumers. This gives us a powerful hand in trade negotiations with big economies such as those of the US, India and Japan. Opening up access to these markets will bring huge opportunities for British businesses and boost inward investment and job creation.”

Britain Stronger in Europe chief Will Straw told The Independent on Sunday that while the No campaign argues Britain would be able to deal faster with China, India and the US, it was a matter of “simple arithmetic. The deal we get at the level of a single market of 500 million [people] is going to be better than the deal we get at the level of 65 million [Britons].”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in