Post-Brexit: UK businesses ‘fat and lazy’, says country’s trade minister

Says negotiating trade deals a waste without exporters to fill market


Afp September 10, 2016
Fox had already told Johnson that the Foreign Office should not interfere with trade issues, and on Thursday criticised the “Foreign Office view of the world” that focused on diplomacy rather than business. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON: The British minister charged with boosting international trade post-Brexit has slammed the country’s businesses as being too “fat and lazy” to capitalise on the opportunity, the Times newspaper reported Saturday.

“This country is not the free-trading nation that it once was,” Secretary of State for International Trade Liam Fox told a reception for Conservative activists in the House of Commons Thursday.

“We have become too lazy and too fat on our successes in previous generations,” he added, saying executives were more interested in “playing golf” than striking deals.

Fox will play a key role in establishing Britain’s role on the world stage as it leaves the European Union, but his comments are likely to cause outrage among the business community that he represents.

The trade minister warned that the arduous task of negotiating trade deals with international partners in the wake of Brexit would be a waste of time “if we don’t have the exporters to fill those markets”.

The newly-appointed minister, who sits on the right wing of the Tory party, said he would be happy to open all industrial sectors to international competition, adding “we must be unapologetic free traders”.

Fox was a leading member of the campaign to leave the union, but has already locked horns with Foreign Office chief Boris Johnson as government departments jostle for position ahead of the daunting job of leaving the EU.

Fox had already told Johnson that the Foreign Office should not interfere with trade issues, and on Thursday criticised the “Foreign Office view of the world” that focused on diplomacy rather than business.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 11th, 2016.

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