Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said she is “overwhelmed” by the response to the UK’s first attendance at an EU finance ministers’ meeting since Brexit.
No negotiations nor demands were made at this point, Ms Reeves said, but they will start in the new year.
UK government red lines on Brexit were reiterated – that there would be no free movement of labour and no return to the single market or customs union – but Ms Reeves said it was in “our collective national interest” to build closer trade relationships with neighbours and to cooperate on security and defence.
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She acknowledged the harm post-Brexit trading has had on the UK, saying the deal was “not the best one for our country and indeed has reduced trade flows, not just from the UK to the European Union, but also from businesses based in the European Union and into the UK”.
There is a “shared objective and a shared challenge” to improve trade and investment flows, she added.
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After “fractious and antagonistic years” now is the time to “rebuild trust” with “allies”, Ms Reeves said.
EU finance ministers want to have “a more businesslike relationship” with the UK, she said, to reset and rebuild.
All assembled ministers agreed growth “is not a zero-sum game” and that all countries in the EU and indeed the UK “need to do more” to boost growth, productivity and competitiveness.
Not since the UK left the EU has a chancellor attended a Eurogroup finance ministers’ meeting.
EU reaction
Ms Reeves’s attendance received a “very warm response”, according to Eurogroup president Paschal Donohoe.
Being in the room with 27 EU finance ministers was “very symbolic and important”, he said.
The gathering “set the tone” and laid out areas the UK and EU can continue to cooperate on.
It follows rare public comments on Brexit by Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey at the recent Mansion House and Treasury Committee meetings.
He said the government must be alert to and welcome opportunities to rebuild relations with the EU as Brexit has reduced the level of goods coming into the UK.
“We should be in active dialogue with the EU,” he told MPs at the Treasury Committee.
“I find it hard to understand people who seem to say that we should implement Brexit in the most hostile fashion possible.”
He added: “I take no position on Brexit. I never have. I’ve always said it’s my job to get on and do it and I’ll do it in the best way possible and I think talking, having a relationship with the European Union is the better way to do it.”