Britain will have to relax immigration rules for Australians if it wants to secure a free trade deal with the Commonwealth nation, its high commissioner to London has said.



Alexander Downer said Australia would seek better access for its businesspeople before agreeing a post-Brexit trade deal with the UK.

Theresa May has made it clear that she wants to reform the UK’s relationship with the EU customs union so it can agree trade deals with other countries around the world after Brexit.

Australia is ready to reach a deal with Britain and it may take on more urgency given Donald Trump’s wish to pursue an “America first” strategy, raising doubts about a potential UK-US agreement.

Downer told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We would want to see greater access for Australian businesspeople working in the UK and that’s often been a part of free trade negotiations – it hasn’t always been by the way, but it’s often been part of our free trade negotiations.

“It might just make it a bit simpler actually, for example an Australian company that invests in the UK might want to bring some of its executives to the UK.

“That can be done with what are called tier 2 visas, but maybe that could be made a little bit easier. I suspect they would be the only sort of changes you’d be looking at.”

Any negotiation over visa arrangements could be conducted separately, but at the same time as a deal for the free movement of goods and services between the two nations, he suggested.

Downer said an Australia-UK agreement could be reached very quickly after Brexit, given that Canberra struck a deal with the US in eight months under George W Bush’s presidency.

He said a similar timeframe could be realistic if Britain did not want to protect certain industries, and that exploratory discussions had already taken place at many levels.

“We have had discussions with them at all sorts of different levels, including ministerial level. We have set up a working group to explore the scope of what a free trade agreement might look like,” he said.

“We can’t negotiate a free trade agreement with the UK until the time is right. Obviously once the UK leaves the EU it can negotiate free trade agreements but not before then.

“But we can scope it out and we’ve provided a scoping paper to the British government to explain what we think the scope of a free trade agreement should look like.”

