tradingkey.logo

US-UK deal 'good news' but tariffs still higher, Bank of England governor says

ReutersMay 9, 2025 4:43 PM

By David Milliken

- Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the trade deal concluded between the United States and Britain was a good thing but still left tariffs on most British goods exports to the U.S. higher than they were before last month.

Before details of the deal were announced on Thursday, the BoE published estimates showing U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff plans as of April 29 would shrink Britain's economy by about 0.3% over three years.

Around two thirds of the hit was due to the direct impact of tariffs in reducing demand for British exports in the United States and elsewhere, while the remainder reflected the impact of trade policy uncertainty in lowering global growth.

Under the deal agreed on Thursday, the United States will continue to impose a new 10% tariff on imports of most British goods but will reduce higher tariffs on imports of British cars, steel and aluminium.

"It's good news. I have to say, it's 'good news' in a world where it will leave the effective tariff rate higher than it was before all of this started. I do think we need to bear that in mind," Bailey said in a question and answer session at an economics conference in Reykjavik.

Bailey has spoken repeatedly of his wish to preserve an open global trading system while tackling the persistent large trade surpluses run by some countries.

Earlier on Friday the BBC published an interview with Bailey where he said Britain should do "everything we can" to reverse the fall in goods exports to the European Union which followed Britain's 2020 departure from the bloc.

While goods exports do not form as big a share of Britain's economy as for some other countries, Britain was more exposed than many to the health of the global economy, Bailey said.

"The impact of all these developments on the trade front on the UK outlook, is conditional therefore not only on the UK trade agreement, but also what the rest of the world agrees as well," he added in Reykjavik.

Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice.

Related Articles