Workingman wrote:If we wish to do deals with those countries we cannot better the deals already negotiated with the EU. WTO rules prevent us from undercutting existing deals.
If you look at the
WTO RTA's (Regional Trade Agreements), for the EU, it is a pretty poor showing. On the left we see very few major countries we trade with regularly. Canada and South Africa the UK could have a deal with in a year.
On the right is a very sorry tale indeed. Japan, Singapore, India and the US (no China, the EU has a limited agreement outside the WTO). If you look at India the process was started 10 years ago.
Looking at those WTO deals, we can do significantly better than the EU. As Canada found. Have a look at the CETA, it is full of protectionism from the EU side.
Workingman wrote:If we can walk away from the EU why can't we walk away from bilateral negotiations?
Ah, but there is the rub. Everyone in the world knows that the EU does not really negotiate, they DEMAND. That is why it takes them a decade to agree a pretty poor trade deal, full of loopholes and protectionism.
I would say the reverse is true. Anyone who stands up to the EU and tells them to get on their bike if they won't negotiate like honourable states do, is more likely to be deemed honest, sensible and trustworthy.