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  World   Europe  17 Apr 2018  UK hoping for a Brexit boost from this week’s Commonwealth Summit

UK hoping for a Brexit boost from this week’s Commonwealth Summit

AFP
Published : Apr 17, 2018, 12:08 am IST
Updated : Apr 17, 2018, 12:08 am IST

Britain last hosted CHOGM in 1997 and is laying on the style.

British Prime Minister Theresa May at a press conference at Downing Street in central London.  (Photo: AFP)
 British Prime Minister Theresa May at a press conference at Downing Street in central London. (Photo: AFP)

London: Britain is hoping this week’s Commonwealth Summit will prise open greater trade with its historic network as it prepares to quit the European single market under Brexit.

The UK is pouncing on the organisation’s analysis showing the advantages of trade between Commonwealth countries due to its common language and legal systems.

But some quarters are warning that Britain’s trade with Commonwealth nations lags so far behind that with its European Union neighbours that a straight replacement is impossible.

The 53 member states are gathering for their biennial Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), being hosted this year in London.

Born out of the former British empire, the voluntary organisation focuses on development and democracy, but is turning its attention to boosting trade.

Intra-Commonwealth trade is expected to increase by at least 17 per cent to around $700 billion by 2020, according to the 2018 Commonwealth Trade Review.

“Brexit will have wide-ranging economic implications for the UK, the EU and many Commonwealth members,” the report says.

“However, there may also be important opportunities for the UK in the post-Brexit period to... Negotiate new bilateral trade agreements with interested Commonwealth members.”

Hard sell
Britain is going for the hard sell during CHOGM.

The summit proper is on Thursday and Friday but kicks off Monday with three days of forums and events that lay the groundwork.

Britain’s International Trade Secretary Liam Fox on Monday chairs a session on catalysing growth and championing free and fairer trade.

Meanwhile, Britain is hosting a reception aimed at showcasing British exports, from food and drink to the English Premier League football trophy.

“You’ve got some of the fastest-growing economies in the world. It will be a great opportunity for us to rebuild old friendships,” British foreign secretary Boris Johnson told BBC television.

“A lot of that is going to be on the table at the Commonwealth summit,” he said Sunday.

When Britain joined the European Economic Community in 1973, it sidelined historic trading links with its former empire, causing much hurt in some countries.

Britain is due to leave the EU in March 2019. A transition period runs until the end of 2020 after which the UK will be out of the European single market and customs union. Britain is gearing up to strike its own trade deals outside the single market and is looking to its former global network.

The Economist magazine said Saturday that the Commonwealth “won’t save Britain from Brexit”, calling the idea that Commonwealth trade could replace EU trade “an amiable delusion”.

In terms of goods and services trade in 2016, Britain does more business with 15 countries — nine of them in the EU — before its biggest Commonwealth trade partners Canada and India.

Overall, the EU accounts for nearly half of Britain’s trade; the Commonwealth accounts for a tenth.

Philip Murphy, director of the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, wrote in The Guardian newspaper: “Sorry, Brexiters. Banking on the Commonwealth is a joke.

“The notion that it can pick up the slack when the UK leaves the EU is nonsense.”

Clean oceans focus
Given its highly diverse membership, if agreements can be struck within the Commonwealth, they can likely achieve wider support.

At the last Commonwealth summit in Malta in November 2015, leaders struck a deal on climate change that paved the way for the Paris agreement days afterwards.

The theme this time is “Towards a Common Future”. The group is hoping to agree an ocean governance charter, a connectivity agenda for trade and investment, and a declaration on tackling cyber crime.

“CHOGM 2018 promises to deliver transformational change for the people of the Commonwealth,” said the organisation’s Secretary-General Patricia Scotland.

“Immediate impact combined with wider influence make the Commonwealth an unparallelled force for building understanding and cooperation towards realising global goals for social and political progress, inclusive prosperity, and sustainable development.”

The summit comes immediately after the 2018 quadrennial Common-wealth Games on Australia’s Gold Coast.

Britain last hosted CHOGM in 1997 and is laying on the style.

Queen Elizabeth II, the head of the Commonwealth, is hosting a dinner for the leaders at Buckingham Palace in London. On Friday they gather in private at Windsor Castle, west of the city.

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