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The Food and Drink Federation (FDF) has published a Trade and Investment Strategy that it said champions the interests of the UK’s food and drink industry, to deliver growth in communities across the country alongside strengthening choice and affordability for UK households at a time of rising inflation.
The FDF’s strategy sets out a positive, comprehensive, cross-government approach on which the food and drink sector can partner with government to deliver tangible gains for the UK economy.
The FDF’s aim is to maximise the benefits of food and drink trade by driving up exports, ensuring the UK is a global hub for innovation and R&D investment, and ensuring that imports support consumer choice, affordability and the UK’s food security.
The strategy highlights the importance of imports both for the UK’s food supply and as a key component to expand long-term growth in sustainable value-added exports, ensuring innovation and the creation of new jobs.
Any new preferential trade agreements must also insist on the need for high standards of production, environmental sustainability and animal welfare while recognising the unique features of the UK food and drink supply mix, urged the FDF.
The Food and Drink Federation’s chief executive Karen Betts said: “The food and drink sector aims to offer shoppers unrivalled choice at affordable prices across a huge range of products. Trade is an important part of that, since we rely on imports of many ingredients that aren’t produced in the UK, like spices. We also export both traditional and innovative British products around the world, from our world-famous biscuits to gluten-free foods and salmon.
“Our report looks at how government and industry put food and drink at the heart of the UK’s new, independent trade policy, and ensures this supports companies in our sector to grow and thrive. Trade is also a means of curbing rising costs, which is particularly important now at a time of soaring inflation.
“This strategy sets out the strong partnership we want to continue to foster with the UK Government and Devolved Administrations, so our industry can play its full role in growing UK exports and in using trade to deliver economic growth and prosperity across the UK, to communities up and down the country.”
Secretary of State for International Trade, Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP, said the UK’s “ambitious trade deals” will continue to open new markets for products made in the UK and sold to the world.
Secretary of State for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs George Eustice MP, said: “There are opportunities for our food and drink businesses in markets around the world, and we want everyone to be lining up to buy British. I look forward to working with the sector to ensure that businesses across the UK can take advantage of the opportunities ahead.”
The FDF’s UK Trade and Investment Strategy has been produced in partnership with Global Counsel and will enable the UK Government to deliver the greatest impact for the UK’s biggest manufacturing sector
Related people: Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP, George Eustice MP, Karen Betts