THE GUARDIAN đ” Reevesâ drive for growth seeks China lifeline after UK market turmoil
Rachel Reeves hailed a new era of ârespectful and consistent future relations with Chinaâ as pressure grew on the embattled Âchancellor to deliver on her governmentâs central promise to fire up UK economic growth.
After meeting Chinaâs vice-Âpremier, He Lifeng, in Beijing, Reeves said Britainâs relationship with the worldâs second largest economy would be âfrank and open on areas where we disagreeâ, while stressing it would be pragmatic in Ââfinding opportunities for safe trade and investmentâ.
The chancellorâs three-day visit to China, ending on Monday assumed an even greater significance after a turbulent week on the financial markets in which UK borrowing costs climbed close to a 16-year high on Friday, Âleaving Reeves in danger of having to raise taxes again or cut spending.
Politically, either choice would be disastrous for the chancellor, who has insisted since her first budget last October that she would not put up taxes significantly again in the short to medium term, and that a return to austerity was not on the cards.
With many Labour MPs and business leaders now calling for a clearer âplan for growthâ from the government, the landmark China visit took place amid intense Treasury briefings about how to boost the economy.
Before leaving for Beijing on Wednesday, Reeves met the CBIâs Rain Newton-Smith, Make UKâs Stephen Phipson and the British Chambers of Commerceâs Shevaun Haviland to discuss what the government could do.
With UK businesses still Âsuffering from the consequences of Brexit, which has replaced open borders with barriers and regulation and led to falls in trade Âvolumes in key sectors, Reeves said her visit to China had secured benefits worth up to ÂŁ1bn for the UK economy, with improved access for UK financial services firms to the Chinese market and a range of other agreements.
The Treasury said: âThe lifting of barriers that restricted export to China across a range of goods and services will support UK exports and innovation, particularly in the agri-food sector where a package Âheadlined by pork, wool, poultry and pet food stands to boost UK trade with China and support new jobs.â
Exports of British food to the EU have dropped by nearly ÂŁ3bn a year since Brexit, a trade thinktank reported last month, with new Âphysical and documentary checks at the borders complicating trade.
The Centre of Inclusive Trade Policy (CITP) found that exports of UK food and agricultural products to the EU had fallen by more than 16% on average across the three years since Britain left the single market, when compared with the three years before the exit. With China concerned about food security for its 1.4bn Âpopulation, breaking down barriers for UK exporters is seen as a key post-Brexit opportunity.
Reeves was at pains to make clear that she had raised human rights and security concerns with the Chinese. A group of nine Labour MPs had urged Reeves to demand the release of the pro-democracy media mogul Jimmy Lai during her visit, the first by a UK chancellor in nearly a decade.
The Treasury said Reeves had raised the Lai case and other human rights concerns, including those over forced labour. Lai, a British citizen who founded the pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily, is accused of conspiracy to commit foreign Âcollusion in Hong Kongâs most high-profile national security trial. He has been in jail since December 2020 and turned 77 in solitary confinement last month. Keir Starmer raised concerns about Laiâs health when he met President Xi Jinping in November.
Reevesâs pursuit of closer economic ties with China, and a relationship based on pragmatism, also comes amid fears that Donald Trumpâs return to the White House will trigger a global trade war. Trump has pledged to slap 20% tariffs on imports into the US, and 60% charges on those from China. With market uncertainties forcing up borrowing costs, Reevesâs financial headroom has begun to look severely limited.
Ben Zaranko, associate director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said: âAs it stands, the chancellor could face a rather unenviable set of options. This unfortunate predicament is largely the consequence of a difficult fiscal inheritance and global economic factors.
âBut it also reflects a series of government choices and mutually incompatible promises: to stick to a hard, numerical fiscal rule while leaving only the finest of margins against it; to prioritise public services and avoid imposing another round of Âausterity; not to raise the biggest taxes, and not to raise taxes again after the autumn budget, and to hold only one fiscal event per year.
âIf higher interest rates wipe out her so-called âheadroomâ, something will have to give.â