UK signs post-Brexit free trade deal with Singapore

The U.K. has signed a free trade deal with Singapore
covering trade worth 17.6 billion pounds ($23.4 billion,) the latest in a
series of trade pacts that Britain is seeking to secure around the world
post-Brexit.
International Trade Secretary Liz Truss, who was in
Singapore for the ceremony, said Thursday the deal was the second-biggest that
Britain has signed in the Asia-Pacific region.
The agreement came as British and European Union
officials make a final push to break a deadlock over the U.K.'s future trade
relationship with the bloc.
Britain left the EU on Jan. 31, but remains in its
economic structures until a transition period ends on Dec.31. The Singapore
deal largely mirrors one that the Asian city-state already has with the EU, and
effectively allows trade to continue as before after Jan. 1.
Truss said the pact with Singapore “secures
certainty” for businesses and is “further proof we can succeed as an
independent trading nation.”
Singapore is Britain's largest trading partner in
Southeast Asia. Truss is also expected to sign a similar deal with Vietnam to
ensure trade continues on the same terms in the new year.
Officials said the two deals bring Britain a step
closer to joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific
Partnership, a growing regional trade bloc. Joining that agreement would
“provide British businesses with an unparalleled gateway to the Pacific
region,” Truss said.
Truss and her Singaporean counterpart, Chan Chun
Sing, also said they plan to start talks for a “Digital Economy
Agreement," which aims to boost British digital trade and partnerships
with Asia.
“This is an important part of our vision for a
Global Britain that sits at the center of a
network of deals with dynamic nations across Asia Pacific and the Americas as a
global hub for services and technology trade,” Truss said in a statement.