logo
Trade strategy will protect UK firms from ‘harm' amid global shift

Trade strategy will protect UK firms from ‘harm' amid global shift

Leader Live8 hours ago

The Department for Business and Trade (DBT) said it was the UK's first Trade Strategy to be published since Brexit.
It follows the publication of an industrial strategy earlier this week which set out plans to back UK industries which the Government thinks have the potential to grow.
The trade plan aims to make the UK the best-connected country in the world to do business, helping to loosen regulation and expand opportunities for exporters.
As part of the plan, the DBT pledged to introduce new tools and safeguards to help protect UK firms against the threat of a shifting global trade environment.
This is understood to mean expanding its ability to respond to unfair trade practices, guarding sectors such as steel, and potential powers to respond to deliberate economic pressures against the UK.
The decision to strengthen trade defences comes at a time of heightened uncertainty following Mr Trump's tariff announcements in April, which have hiked charges on most US imports and raised concerns over the future of global trade arrangements.
The strategy nonetheless follows a trio of major deals struck between the UK and India, the US and the EU in recent months.
The agreement with the US is set to implement quotas that will effectively eliminate the tariff on British steel and reduce the rate on UK vehicles to 10%.
Meanwhile, the deal with India opened up trade between the two countries by lowering tariffs on exports like gin and whisky.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the trade strategy was a 'promise to British business: helping firms to sell more, grow faster, and compete globally'.
Jonathan Reynolds, the Government's Business and Trade Secretary, said: 'The UK is an open trading nation but we must reconcile this with a new geopolitical reality and work in our own national interest.
'Our Trade Strategy will sharpen our trade defence so we can ensure British businesses are protected from harm, while also relentlessly pursuing every opportunity to sell to more markets under better terms than before.'
Trade minister Douglas Alexander said the Government was taking 'every step necessary to safeguard British businesses from the increasingly protectionist mood in much of the world by sharpening our defensive toolkit'.
Meanwhile, the newly created Ricardo Fund aims to set aside funding to tackle complex regulatory issues and remove obstacles for UK businesses selling abroad – which the DBT said could unlock £5 billion worth of opportunities.
It is also expanding the capacity of UK Export Finance – the country's export credit agency – by £20 billion to total £80 billion.
The body provides Government-backed loans, guarantees and insurance to help companies trade overseas.
Separate to the trade strategy, the DBT said it was calling for views across the steel industry about how future trade measures and protections should be shaped.
Steel producers and businesses across the supply chain will be invited to submit feedback over a six-week 'call for evidence' period.
Current safeguarding measures – which include tariff-free quotas on steel imports to limit sudden surges – expire in June next year.
Mr Reynolds said the Government would 'not sit by idly while cheap imports threaten to undercut UK industry'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

From shortage to surplus: India pours record rice crop into ethanol
From shortage to surplus: India pours record rice crop into ethanol

Reuters

time27 minutes ago

  • Reuters

From shortage to surplus: India pours record rice crop into ethanol

MUMBAI, June 26 (Reuters) - India is allocating record rice volumes for ethanol production as it struggles with unprecedented inventories that are likely to swell further with the arrival of the new season crop, a reversal from earlier shortages that led to export curbs. Turning more rice to ethanol is helping to reduce rice stocks in the world's biggest producer and exporter of the grain and keeping India's ambitious ethanol blending programme on track despite a drop in supplies of traditional feedstock sugar cane. In March, India removed the last of roughly two years of restrictions on rice exports, which had been prompted by poor rains that curtailed production. This year's ample monsoon rains are poised to deliver an abundant harvest. "Our top priority is making sure we have enough food," a senior government official told Reuters, declining to be named because he was not authorised to speak with media. "But since we have way more rice than we actually need for that, we've decided to use some of it for ethanol production," the official said. The state-run Food Corporation of India (FCI) has allocated a record 5.2 million metric tons of rice for ethanol, equivalent to nearly 9% of global rice shipments in the 2024/25 marketing year ending in June. In the previous year, less than 3,000 tons of FCI rice went into ethanol. FCI buys nearly half of India's rice crop and currently has reserves, including unmilled paddy, of a record 59.5 million metric tons on June 1, far exceeding the government's target of 13.5 million tons for July 1. The availability of rice for ethanol has taken pressure off corn prices, which jumped to record high last years, forcing record imports by India. Grain-based distilleries use corn, rice and damaged food grains as feedstock, switching between them depending on price. India, the No.3 oil importer and consumer of petroleum products, aims to increase the blending of ethanol into gasoline to 20% by 2025/26. Last month, it nearly hit that target, reaching 19.8% ethanol, thanks to plentiful rice. The 20% goal had appeared to be beyond reach when sugarcane supplies, which accounted for 80% of ethanol feedstock until three years ago, tumbled because of drought in 2023, forcing the world's biggest consumer of the sweetener to sharply reduce diversion of sugar for ethanol. Last year, India's gasoline included 14.6% ethanol. Even more rice will be used for ethanol if the government either lowers rice prices or increases the ethanol buying price, said Arushi Jain, joint secretary at the Grain Ethanol Manufacturers Association. The FCI is selling rice at 22,500 Indian rupees ($262.19) per ton, while oil marketing companies are procuring rice-based ethanol at 58.5 rupees per litre, which doesn't provide enough margin to ramp up rice-based ethanol production even further, said Akshay Modi, managing director at Modi Naturals Ltd, an ethanol manufacturer. FCI stocks could rise further as India is likely to harvest a bumper crop from October, said B.V. Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters Association. India can increase exports only so much, said Rao, as it already accounts for more than 40% of global rice shipments. Since removing export curbs, India has been aggressively exporting rice, with shipments likely to rise nearly 25% to a record 22.5 million tons in the 2025 calendar year, denting exports of rivals including Thailand and Vietnam. India harvested a record 146.1 million tons of rice this crop year ending in June, far surpassing local demand of 120.7 million tons, according the Food and Agriculture Organization. Rising stockpiles will force India to allocate even more rice for ethanol production next marketing year, said Himanshu Agrawal, executive director at rice exporter Satyam Balajee. "The government's going to have a hard time offloading all that rice they bought from farmers," said Agrawal. ($1 = 85.8140 Indian rupees)

Starmer seeking to quell revolt over welfare reform plan
Starmer seeking to quell revolt over welfare reform plan

Western Telegraph

time29 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

Starmer seeking to quell revolt over welfare reform plan

Downing Street insiders said talks were taking place with Labour MPs about the legislation after 126 of them publicly backed a move to block the legislation. The first vote on the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill is due to take place on Tuesday and a concerted effort has been launched by ministers to win round potential rebels. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer faces the most serious revolt of his premiership (Ben Stansall/PA) A No 10 source said: 'The broken welfare system is failing the most vulnerable and holding too many people back. 'It's fair and responsible to fix it. There is broad consensus across the party on this.' The source insisted the reforms were 'underpinned by… Labour values'. They said: 'Delivering fundamental change is not easy, and we all want to get it right, so of course we're talking to colleagues about the Bill and the changes it will bring, we want to start delivering this together on Tuesday.' Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said talks between backbenchers and the Government were 'ongoing' as six more Labour MPs added their names to the rebel amendment that would halt the legislation in its tracks. The reasoned amendment argues that disabled people have not been properly consulted and further scrutiny of the changes is needed. Angela Rayner sought to reassure backbenchers on Wednesday (Andrew Milligan/PA) The new signatories include the Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee chairman Toby Perkins, Stoke-on-Trent Central MP Gareth Snell, Newcastle upon Tyne MP Mary Glindon and Tamworth MP Sarah Edwards. North Ayrshire and Arran MP Irene Campbell and Colchester MP Pam Cox, both of whom won their seats in the party's 2024 landslide election victory, have also added their names. The new names take the total number of Labour backbenchers supporting the amendment, tabled by Treasury Select Committee chairwoman Dame Meg Hillier, to 126. The plans restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability payment in England, and limit the sickness-related element of universal credit. The Government hopes the changes will get more people back into work and save up to £5 billion a year. Existing claimants will be given a 13-week phase-out period of financial support, a move seen as a bid to head off opposition by aiming to soften the impact of the changes. But the fact so many Labour MPs are prepared to put their names to the 'reasoned amendment' calling for a change of course shows how entrenched the opposition remains. To leave it until a few days before the vote, it's not a very good way of running the country Labour backbencher One backbencher preparing to vote against the Bill told the PA news agency: 'A lot of people have been saying they're upset about this for months. 'To leave it until a few days before the vote, it's not a very good way of running the country. 'It's not very grown-up.' They said that minor concessions would not be enough, warning: 'I don't think you can tinker with this. They need to go back to the drawing board.' The Daily Telegraph reported that potential concessions being considered include a commitment to speed up payment of support to help people back into work and offering assurances that reviews of policies in this area will be published. Meanwhile, The Times reported some MPs opposed to the plans had blamed Sir Keir's chief of staff Morgan McSweeney and suggested the time had come for 'regime change' in Downing Street. Other senior Labour figures outside Parliament, including Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan, have publicly expressed their opposition to the plans. Meanwhile, the Tories seem unlikely to lend the Government their support, with leader Kemi Badenoch setting out conditions for doing so, including a commitment to rule out tax rises in the autumn budget and further cut to the benefits bill.

Starmer prepares welfare concessions amid backlash over benefit cuts
Starmer prepares welfare concessions amid backlash over benefit cuts

The Independent

time33 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Starmer prepares welfare concessions amid backlash over benefit cuts

Sir Keir Starmer is preparing a climbdown as a major rebellion builds against his planned benefit cuts, Downing Street has suggested. The prime minister will be locked in talks on Thursday with backbench Labour MPs to find concessions to help him stave off an embarrassing defeat. After more than 120 of his own MPs signed an amendment threatening to kill his welfare reform bill, a Downing Street source said ministers are 'talking to colleagues about the bill and the changes it will bring'. But, after days of appearing to rule out changes to the legislation, which aims to cut the welfare bill by £5bn, the source told reporters that 'we want to start delivering this together on Tuesday'. And Douglas Alexander said on Thursday that, having read the rebel amendment, 'the first thing that strikes you is that everyone agrees welfare needs reform and that the system is broken'. The trade minister told Sky News: 'Everyone recognizes you're trying to take people off benefits and into work, because that's better for them and also better for our fiscal position. 'Where there is some disagreement at the moment is on the issue of how you give implementation to those principles.' Mr Alexander said a second reading vote like Tuesday's was usually on the principles of legislation, but the rebellion has forced ministers to consider 'how to give implementation to those principles'. 'So given the high level of agreement on the principles, the discussions over the coming days will really be about the implementation of those principles,' he said. It came after Labour MPs called for 'regime change' in Downing Street, with some elected last summer lashing out at the 'over-excitable boys' in Sir Keir's top team. Many blame the PM's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, for ignoring the concerns of backbenchers 'We are all very happy that we have a leader who's so respected around the world… we just think he needs fewer over-excitable boys in his team,' one MP told The Times. The total number of Labour MPs who have signed the amendment against Sir Keir's welfare cuts hit 126 on Wednesday, despite rebels having been warned with potential de-selections and the government's potential collapse if they support it. Efforts to win over rebels had been led by health secretary Wes Streeting, chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden, business secretary Jonathan Reynolds, and work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall. Asked what concessions could be offered to convince rebels to back the government, Angela Rayner sought to reassure backbenchers that they would not be expected to betray the party's traditional values. "I'm not going to get into that on your show tonight," the deputy prime minister said in an interview on ITV's Peston programme. "Those discussions are ongoing around making sure that the welfare reforms that we're bringing in support people into work who need that, and we're putting a huge amount of investment into doing that, but also protecting the most vulnerable." She acknowledged that "a lot of people are very scared about these changes" but added: "I haven't changed my Labour values and we're not expecting our benches to do anything that isn't in check with them. "What we want to do is support people, and that is the crucial bit around these reforms of what Labour are trying to achieve, and we're discussing that with our MPs." The plans restrict eligibility for personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability payment in England, and limit the sickness-related element of universal credit. The Government hopes the changes will get more people back into work and save up to £5 billion a year. Existing claimants will be given a 13-week phase-out period of financial support, a move seen as a bid to head off opposition by aiming to soften the impact of the changes. The fact so many Labour MPs are prepared to put their names to the "reasoned amendment" calling for a change of course shows how entrenched the opposition remains. One backbencher preparing to vote against the Bill said: "A lot of people have been saying they're upset about this for months. To leave it until a few days before the vote, it's not a very good way of running the country. "It's not very grown up." They said that minor concessions would not be enough, warning: "I don't think you can tinker with this. They need to go back to the drawing board." According to the government's impact assessment, the welfare reforms as a whole could push an extra 250,000 people, including 50,000 children, into relative poverty.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store