LONDON (Reuters) - The United Kingdom will restart talks with India on a free trade deal in the new year, Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office said on Monday 18 November 2024, following a months-long pause in negotiations due to elections in both countries.
London will seek a "new strategic partnership" with India as well as deepening co-operation in areas like security, education, technology and climate change, Starmer's office said after he met his Indian counterpart, Narendra Modi, at the G20 summit in Brazil.
"A new trade deal with India will support jobs and prosperity in the UK," Starmer, whose Labour Party was elected to power in July 2024, said.
The British leader also met Chinese President Xi Jinping at the summit in Rio de Janeiro, calling on him to establish "consistent, durable" relations between their two nations and saying he would like to engage on areas such as trade, the economy and climate.
Starmer has pledged to secure the fastest sustained economic growth for Britain among the Group of Seven countries. The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development has predicted that British growth in 2025 would be the lowest of the G7.
The previous Conservative government held years-long trade talks with New Delhi, but they ended in March 2024 without a deal, with a British official saying an agreement could not be finalised ahead of the Indian elections.
Total trade between India and Britain, currently the world's fifth- and sixth-largest economies, was worth £42 billion in the twelve months to June 2024, with British exports to India valued at £16.6 billion.
Before India's 19 April-1 June general election, which handed Modi a rare third term, government sources said that he was likely to prioritise completion of free trade deals with Britain and Oman if he were to be e-elected.
Previous sticking points in the trade talks between the two countries have included a steep import duty on British whiskey for sale in India and India's demand for more visas for Indian students and businesses.
"India is [...] a vital trading partner for the UK. We believe there is a good deal to be done here that works for both nations," British Business Minister Jonathan Reynolds said.