Britain needs to boost
trade negotiating resources, says Hammond
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[July 07, 2016]
By Kylie MacLellan and William James
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain will need to
boost its trade negotiating resources following its decision to leave
the European Union but it is unrealistic to believe the government will
have a huge budget to do so, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on
Thursday.
Last month's vote has exposed the lack of trade negotiating expertise in
a country whose deals have been conducted for decades through the EU.
"The government will have to acquire additional trade negotiation
resources ... We will look to friendly governments to assist us, as well
as seeking to hire the best resources available on the open market,"
Hammond told a committee of lawmakers.
He said the economic and fiscal impact of Brexit in the short term would
reduce government revenues, making it unlikely his department would
receive a significant funding boost.
"The game of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office is going to need to be
stepped up. I simply don't necessarily equate stepping up our game with
doubling or trebling the budget - I think that is a wildly unrealistic
aspiration," he said.
Hammond, who backed Britain remaining in the bloc, said the government's
legal advice was that the decision to invoke Article 50 to formally
trigger the start of Brexit negotiations was one for the prime minister
rather than parliament to make.
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Britain is not yet ready to do that, he added, in part because a successor to
Prime Minister David Cameron will not be in place until Sept. 9.
"For the moment we are not in a position to begin substantive negotiations
immediately and therefore it would be unwise to start the process ticking by
triggering Article 50," he said.
Hammond also said he hoped an early agreement could be reached on reciprocal
residency rights for EU citizens in Britain and Britons living in the EU.
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He said that while he had not heard any EU partners say they would not agree to
this, there was an "Article 50 stand off".
Other EU states saying they will not hold preliminary talks before the formal
process for leaving is triggered is preventing progress being made on this and
other issues, he said.
(Reporting by Kylie MacLellan and William James; editing by Stephen Addison)
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