U.S. trade chief holds talks on UK trade deal possibilities
The Obama administration's top trade official said on Thursday he has held preliminary discussions with British government officials about how the two countries could pursue bilateral trade relations after Britain leaves the European Union.
U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman told a Christian Science Monitor media breakfast that he discussed the subject earlier this week with Sajid Javid and Mark Price, Britain's outgoing business and trade secretaries.
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Froman also said that the TTIP negotiations with the European Union will need to be readjusted to account for the loss of Britain from the trading bloc because a
ccess to the UK market is a "significant part of what makes the TTIP attractive to the United States," with the Britain taking 25 percent of U.S. goods exports to the EU.
Both sides need to think through "what kind of adjustments of both offers and expectations are going to be needed in order to be able to close these negotiations."
For example, with Europe wanting full access to U.S. public sector procurement, the loss of Britain would remove a quarter of Europe's public procurement market from the deal, he said.