CPTPP which will enter into force for the UK on 15 December 2024,
will be the first free trade agreement between the UK and
Malaysia.
The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific
Partnership (CPTPP), which will enter into force for the United
Kingdom (UK) on 15 December 2024, will be the first free trade
agreement between the UK and Malaysia.
At an event in Kuala Lumpur, Mr David Wallace, Acting British
High Commissioner to Malaysia, together with YB Datuk Seri Utama
Tengku Zafrul Aziz, Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry
jointly launched a countdown to the UK's CPTPP entry-into-force
moment.
CPTPP is a free trade agreement between 12 countries, spanning
five continents. With the UK joining, the combined Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) of the CPTPP members increases from over £9
trillion to around £12 trillion, from around 12% to 15% of global
GDP.
With CPTPP, the UK and Malaysia will have a free trade agreement
for the first time. This will offer significantly increased
market access to both countries and will support shared ambition
to remove barriers to trade. It will also create new
opportunities for businesses and investors building on the work
already completed by the Malaysia-UK Joint Committee on Bilateral
Trade & Investment Cooperation.
At the launch event, YB Tengku Zafrul said:
We warmly welcome the UK into the CPTPP framework. As Malaysia's
first bilateral Free Trade Agreement with the UK, Malaysian
exporters now have better access to the UK market, whose economy
breached USD4 trillion in 2023. Malaysia's CPTPP membership has
certainly boosted our competitiveness, while fostering better
integration of our exporters into the global supply chain.
In reiterating the benefits of CPTPP, Mr Wallace added:
The UK's accession to the CPTPP marks a significant milestone in
our trade relationship with Malaysia. By eliminating tariffs and
streamlining trade processes, we are creating growth and a more
prosperous future for both nations. It is time for businesses to
prepare to take advantage of the of the agreement.
Bilateral trade between the UK and Malaysia currently totalled
£5.7 billion in the four quarters to the end of Q2 2024. The
CPTPP will enable local businesses to benefit from duty-free
exports, boosting not only established sectors like electrical
and electronics (E&E) and machinery and parts but also
opening new prospects for Malaysia's commodities such as palm
oil; rubber; and timber in the UK market. CPTPP is also expected
to boost the UK's export of chocolate and cars to Malaysia.
In addition CPTPP will provide the opportunity to deepen British
and Malaysian participation in each other's supply chains and
diversify our trade. The rules of origin provisions could provide
greater choice for our businesses when sourcing intermediate
goods as well as increase opportunities for exporters, including
SMEs.
The UK's accession to CPTPP will give Malaysian firms and
professionals greater certainty when looking to work in the UK to
deliver services on a temporary basis.
It also provides UK and Malaysian companies alike with a
guaranteed right to compete for opportunities in each other's
government procurement market on equal terms with local
suppliers.
Through CPTPP, Malaysia and the UK secure investment
liberalisation commitments for the first time, providing greater
certainty to investors wanting to establish businesses in the UK
or Malaysia.