Reeves to hold trade talks with US counterpart in Washington


Rachel Reeves will meet her US counterpart on Friday as she attempts to make progress on a trade deal during her visit to Washington.

The Chancellor is expected to discuss a potential UK-US trade deal when she sits down with Treasury secretary Scott Bessent after a series of talks with other finance ministers at the International Monetary Fundโ€™s spring meetings earlier this week.

The Government hopes that a deal with the US will mitigate the impact of the tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump at the start of April that rocked financial markets and sparked fears of a global downturn.

Mr Trumpโ€™s announcement saw Britain hit with 10% tariffs on all exports to the US, as well as a 25% levy on cars, steel and aluminium.

Ms Reeves has said there is โ€œa deal to be doneโ€ with Washington, despite suggestions from senior US officials that Mr Trump regards the 10% tariff as a โ€œbaselineโ€ he is unlikely to go below.

But she has also ruled out several concessions the US is thought to be looking for as the price of a deal.

These include reductions in food standards rules that limit imports of American agricultural goods and changes to online safety legislation that some US politicians believe limit freedom of speech.

A deal could, however, involve a reduction in tariffs on US cars in exchange for a cut in tariffs on British-made vehicles, with Ms Reeves declining to rule out such a move on Wednesday.

So far, the Chancellor has used her visit to the IMF to champion free trade, telling a panel event on Thursday evening she wanted to see both tariff and non-tariff barriers reduced.

But she added that developed economies could not afford to be โ€œagnostic or naiveโ€ about where goods were produced at a time when โ€œresilience and security matter more than they have done for a long timeโ€.

At the same event, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva praised the Chancellorโ€™s efforts to โ€œlift up growth in the UKโ€.

Ms Georgieva said: โ€œShe is tackling very tough issues, getting reprioritisation of spending, getting the regulatory environment to be more rational and then taking on the battle to get it done, and itโ€™s really impressive.โ€

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.