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US and Britain to announce tariff agreement on Thursday

Thursday is expected to see the United States and Britain announce an agreement to lower tariffs for some goods. This will be the first such deal since U.S. president Donald Trump began imposing levies to countries all over the world.

Trump announced on Truth Social on Thursday that he will hold a news conference in the Oval Office at 10:00 a.m. ET (1400 GMT), to discuss a "major deal" with representatives of an important and highly respected country.

A spokesperson for the British government said that Prime Minister Keir starmer will give an update about U.S.-UK trading talks later on Thursday. Two British sources familiar with the situation have said that the outline of an accord will be announced.

A spokesperson for Downing Street said that the United States was an essential ally to our national and economic security. The Prime Minister will provide an update on the progress of negotiations between our two countries.

On Tuesday, a British official said that both sides were trying to reach an agreement on lower tariff quotas (a portion of exports that are subject to lower duty) on steel and automobiles. These two sectors were affected by 25% U.S. duties.

In exchange, Britain will likely agree to lower their own tariffs on U.S. automobiles and reduce a digital tax that impacts U.S. technology groups. It refused to lower food standards to allow U.S. producers to have greater access to the market.

It was not clear what the status of Trump's 10% "baseline tariff" on Britain and most other countries would be.

It will have political significance for both countries, despite the potential narrowness of any agreement.

Investors are watching to see if Trump can deescalate the trade war he started after the global tariffs threatened to reignite inflation and slow economic growth.

The British government tries to minimize the worst effects of Trump's tariffs, without compromising its efforts to reset the trade relationship with the European Union. The UK also signed a new deal with India this week.

Trump's trade conflict has shaken financial markets, and fears of recession have been raised. Central bankers and executives are grappling with sometimes chaotic policymaking which is affecting world supply chains as well as a wide range of industries.

Last month, the International Monetary Fund slashed their growth forecasts for China, the United States and the majority of countries. They cited the impact U.S. Tariffs, and warned that increasing trade tensions could further slow down growth.

U.S. officials and Chinese officials will also be holding talks in Switzerland this Saturday. This could be the first step to resolving the potentially damaging trade conflict between the two largest economies in the world.

Trump's top officials are in a frenzy of meetings with trading partner since the president imposed the 10% tariff on April 2, along with higher "reciprocal tariff rates" for many trading partners. These rates were suspended later for 90 days.

The United States has not imposed additional tariffs on Britain because the country imports more than it exports. Reporting by Alistair Smout, writing by Kate Holton, editing by Topra Chopra

(source: Reuters)