Britain vows to toughen its trade defences under new strategy
Britain's Secretary of State for Business and Trade Jonathan Reynolds arrives for a cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street in London, Britain, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo
Britain vows to toughen its trade defences under new strategy
LONDON - Britain said it would toughen up its trade defences to better protect industries amid a turbulent global outlook of trade wars and tariffs that has shaped its new trade strategy to be published on Thursday.
Britain is set to partially implement a deal to remove some of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, but acknowledged that its trade remedies system needed to be more "agile, assertive, and accountable to guard British businesses against global turbulence".
"The UK is an open trading nation but we must reconcile this with a new geopolitical reality and work in our own national interest," Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said.
"Our trade strategy will sharpen our trade defence so we can ensure British businesses are protected from harm."
As part of the strategy, the government will reform the Trade Remedies Authority.
UK Steel has said that the TRA's current powers, under which it proposed to cap how much of certain kinds of steel could be imported, needed to be more robust, and welcomed the trade strategy as a "critical turning point".
Britain is aiming to remove U.S. tariffs on steel imports under their agreement, although the implementation of the deal has not been finalised.
The government has stepped in to take control of British Steel, and other industries are also seeking support, with AB Foods extending its deadline for deciding the fate of its Vivergo bioethanol plant to Thursday in the hope of a support package.
The trade strategy is Britain's first since it has had an independent trade policy after leaving the European Union.
The previous Conservative government hailed the opportunities of Brexit as it pursued several free trade agreements.
While the Labour government, which came to power a year ago, has concluded free trade agreement talks with India and is making progress on another with the Gulf Cooperation Council, it said the new strategy would focus on quicker and more practical deals than the previous government did. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
19 minutes ago
- Straits Times
China hosts Iranian, Russian defence ministers against backdrop of ‘momentous change'
Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun and his counterparts pose for a group photo before the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation Defence Ministers' Meeting in Qingdao on June 26. PHOTO: REUTERS QINGDAO, China - China hosted defence ministers from Iran and Russia for a meeting in its eastern seaside city of Qingdao on June 26 against the backdrop of war in the Middle East and a summit of Nato countries in Europe that agreed to boost military spending. Beijing has long sought to present the 10-member Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) as a counterweight to Western-led power blocs and has pushed to strengthen collaboration between its member countries in politics, security, trade and science. The Qingdao meeting of the organisation's top defence officials comes as a fledgling ceasefire between Israel and Iran holds after 12 days of fighting between the arch-foes. It is also being held the day after a summit of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) leaders in The Hague, where members agreed to ramp up their defence spending to satisfy US President Donald Trump. Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun framed the June 26 meeting of officials in Qingdao, home to a major Chinese naval base, as a counterweight to a world in 'chaos and instability'. 'As momentous changes of the century accelerate, unilateralism and protectionism are on the rise,' Mr Dong said as he welcomed defence chiefs from Russia, Iran, Pakistan, Belarus and elsewhere on June 25 , according to state news agency Xinhua. 'Hegemonic, domineering and bullying acts severely undermine the international order,' he warned. He urged his counterparts to 'take more robust actions to jointly safeguard the environment for peaceful development'. Meeting Mr Dong on the sidelines of the summit, Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov hailed ties between the two countries as being 'at an unprecedentedly high level'. 'Friendly relations between our countries maintain upward dynamics of development in all directions,' he said. China has portrayed itself as a neutral party in Russia's war with Ukraine, although Western governments say its close ties have given Moscow crucial economic and diplomatic support. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Business Times
43 minutes ago
- Business Times
China opens first offshore gold vault and contracts in Hong Kong
[SINGAPORE] The Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) has expanded outside mainland China for the first time, with the rollout of two new contracts and a bullion vault in Hong Kong. The launch serves a number of purposes, from broadening the Shanghai exchange's international reach to strengthening China's clout in commodity and currency markets and Hong Kong's status as a financial centre. Trading will be conducted in yuan and settled by cash or physical delivery, including to the new vault operated by Bank of China's Hong Kong unit, the SGE said on Wednesday (Jun 25). The two contracts covering different purity levels will debut on Thursday. To attract traders, the exchange said it will waive fees at the vault till the end of the year. As the world's top producer and consumer of gold, China wants to wield greater influence in pricing the commodity. The denomination of the SGE's new contracts is particularly important given Beijing's ambition to reduce reliance on the US dollar and promote wider use of the yuan in international trade. The SGE was established in 2002 by the People's Bank of China as the country's primary platform for trading bullion. In 2014, it set up the International Board to allow foreigners to participate directly in China's market. That effort is now accelerating for other commodities. The Shanghai Futures Exchange, the country's top venue for trading raw materials, recently unveiled a proposal to enhance access to overseas investors. Although the SGE is the single largest exchange for physical gold, London remains the market's undisputed centre. Other hubs, including Singapore, are also trying to wrest some of the action away from the centuries-old UK market. Interest has only grown after the precious metal staged a massive rally to record levels, with prices more than doubling since the turn of the decade. Much of gold's appeal is its reputation as a reliable store of value, and China's central bank has been a major buyer over the past three years, in part to diversify reserves away from the US dollar. Hong Kong, meanwhile, is a well-established banking centre that's seeking to keep pace with the expansion of other financial hubs in the region. The former British colony has a plan to bolster its presence in commodities, from warehousing to trading and logistical services across markets, including bullion. BLOOMBERG


AsiaOne
an hour ago
- AsiaOne
They voted for Trump. Most still back him - but not on everything, World News
From her corner of the United States near Houston, Texas, stay-at-home mother Loretta Torres, 38, admires President Donald Trump's confidence and bargaining style. She has no complaints with his presidency. In Des Moines, Iowa, Lou Nunez, an 83-year-old US Army veteran, has been horrified by Trump's cuts to federal agencies, whipsaw tariff announcements, and crackdowns on protesters. Terry Alberta, 64, a pilot in southwestern Michigan, supports most of Trump's policies but he thinks some of the slashed federal spending might have to be restored and he dislikes the president's demeanour. "I get really frustrated with him when he starts calling people names and just saying crazy things," he said. Although they all helped elect Trump in November, Torres, Nunez and Alberta have very different reactions to his presidency so far. They are among 20 Trump voters Reuters has interviewed monthly since February about the president's dramatic changes to the United States' government, trade policy and immigration enforcement, among other issues. Nunez and one of the other 20 voters now regret casting a ballot for the president. Torres and four others say they fully support his administration. But most — like Alberta — fall somewhere in between. The 20 voters were selected from 429 respondents to a February 2025 Ipsos poll who said they voted for Trump in November and were willing to speak to a reporter. They are not a statistically representative portrait of all Trump voters, but their ages, educational backgrounds, races/ethnicities, locations and voting histories roughly corresponded to those of Trump's overall electorate. Even monthly check-ins cannot always keep pace with the breakneck news cycle under Trump. Reuters most recently interviewed the group in May, before Trump deployed US service members to Los Angeles and other cities to quell widespread protests against the administration's immigration crackdown and prior to tensions erupting with Iran. Trump's efforts to tighten border security were most popular among the group. Describing their concerns about the administration, these voters most often cited the economic uncertainty triggered by Trump's federal cuts and tariffs. That tracks with the latest Ipsos-Reuters poll findings, which show Trump polling below his overall approval rating on the economy, and above it on immigration. Recent polls also show that Americans who helped elect Trump to his second term overwhelmingly like what they see so far. In a six-day Ipsos-Reuters poll that concluded on June 16, 9 out of 10 respondents who said they voted for Trump in November also said they approved of his performance in office so far. "I like the way he portrays himself as being a strong leader," said Torres. "It makes us look stronger to other countries." White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement that Trump had delivered on his campaign promises by reducing US border crossings to historic lows and keeping inflation lower than expected. "The Administration is committed to building on these successes by slashing the waste, fraud, and abuse in our government and levelling the playing field for American industries and workers with more custom-made trade deals," Desai said. 'Anxiety is the buzzword' Most of the 20 voters interviewed say they now have qualms about some of Trump's most extreme measures. Brandon Neumeister, 36, a Pennsylvania state corrections worker and former National Guardsman, said he disagreed with a May request by the Department of Homeland Security for 20,000 National Guard members to help detain illegal immigrants. "To deploy troops on American soil in American cities, I think that sends a very severe message," he said. Neumeister voted for Trump hoping for lower prices and inflation, and said he knows it will take time for the president's economic policies to yield results. But people close to him have lost jobs as a result of Trump downsizing the federal government, and several friends of his are anxious about losing pensions or healthcare due to budget cuts at the US Department of Veterans Affairs. "Anxiety is the buzzword for everything right now," Neumeister said, adding that it was "hard to say" whether he's glad Trump is president. Federal workforce reductions are also wearing on Robert Billups, 34, an accountant in Washington state currently searching for his next job. He has seen federal positions disappear from job sites, and he frequently gets worried calls from his mother, who is a contractor with the Internal Revenue Service. "This is more than my mom has ever reached out to me. I feel like it's freaking her out," he said. Ethical concerns Several Trump voters in the group also said they were uneasy about actions by Trump that critics say overstep his presidential authority. Don Jernigan, 74, a retiree in Virginia Beach, said he likes the outcomes of most of Trump's policies but not the way he sometimes pushes them through, such as his record number of executive orders or his imposition of tariffs on other countries, a power that Jernigan says belongs to Congress. Nor does he like the fact that Trump accepted a jet given to the United States by Qatar, which Jernigan views as an enemy nation. "Trump works off of ideas. He doesn't work off of principles. He has no principles," Jernigan said. Overall, however, he thinks Trump is protecting US borders and deterring threats against the nation better than the other candidates for president would have. Trump's acceptance of the Qatari jet also struck Amanda Taylor, 51, an insurance firm employee near Savannah, Georgia, as potentially unethical. "It just seems a little like he can do whatever he wants to without repercussion," she said. Taylor, who voted for former President Joe Biden in 2020, says it is too early to tell yet whether Trump is an improvement. She likes Trump's pledges to deport criminals and gang members. But she has been most closely watching economic indicators, especially interest rates, because she and her husband closed on a new house this month. Changes they hope to see Among Trump voters with fewer complaints about the president's second term, there are still areas where they hope to see some change. David Ferguson, 53, hoped the Trump administration would revitalise US manufacturing, and so far he is "pleased with the groundwork" and "at least the direction that they're communicating." [[nid:719154]] At the industrial supply company in western Georgia where he works as a mechanical engineer and account manager, Ferguson has seen Trump's tariffs drive up prices on a range of products, from roller bearings to food-processing equipment. He does not expect the prices to fall as quickly as they've risen. Ferguson would like the administration to offer tax incentives to companies like his that are making it possible for more things to be made in the United States. "It would help encourage businesses that are already domesticating manufacturing and give them some relief from the tariffs, kind of reward their good behaviour," he said. Several other Trump voters voiced support for a policy that might surprise left-leaning voters: a clearer legal immigration pathway for aspiring Americans who are law-abiding and want to contribute to the US economy. Gerald Dunn, 66, is a martial-arts instructor in New York's Hudson Valley and "middle-of-the-road" voter who said he is frustrated by extremism in both US political parties. Dunn said he knows people who have tried to enter the United States legally but encountered "horrendous" red tape. People with skills and stable employment offers could become "assets to the country" instead of liabilities if it were easier for them to immigrate, Dunn said. In Charlotte, North Carolina, engineer Rich Somora, 61, said he supports Trump's efforts to deport criminals but he also recognises that immigrants are increasingly doing key jobs that US citizens don't want to do, such as building construction. "If somebody's contributing, give them a pathway, you know? I got no problem with that," Somora said. [[nid:719243]]