US-UK digital services set for post-Brexit boost
While Donald Trump and Boris Johnson enthuse about the possibility of a US-UK free trade agreement (FTA) after Brexit, a new report has claimed the digital services market could be boosted well before any such broader deal was agreed.
US and UK financial centre success: business success will rely on free access, processing and exchange of data
Miles Celic, CEO of TheCityUK, said: “The UK and US host the world’s leading financial centres, but as the industry continues to digitise, success will increasingly rely on the ability of businesses to freely access, process and exchange data."The UK already has a very similar outlook to the US on many of these issues, such as data localisation, and it should aim to be ambitious on what it wants to do following Brexit. This will be as much about improving security and regulatory access to data, as it is about lowering customer costs, improving competition and expanding consumer choice.”Steve Holt, a partner at EY, added: “The global economy is being reshaped by digital technology, and innovations in data use. In financial services, personal data is used to detect fraud, manage risk, monitor financial market activity, and develop personalised products."However, even as data-driven innovations are expanding the horizons of global trade and investment, some countries are creating new barriers, like data localisation, which risk stifling innovation. The UK should avoid such barriers and seek to forge ambitious data exchange relationships with partners around the world.”While the report said the UK was likely to continue to adhere to European consumer data protection standards (GDPR) post-Brexit, these standards should not limit its ambition for creating a Transatlantic digital market in services with a scope far beyond the one that exists today.According to the report, the UK and US should look to capitalise on their shared approach to issues such as forced data localisation and cybersecurity, broadening what is already one of the busiest routes for cross-border data exchange in the world.The report also makes clear that as the industry becomes increasingly digitalised, its ability to innovate and provide new products will become increasingly reliant on the terms by which firms can trade and exchange data internationally.For more news and views on the issues surrounding Brexit, visit our dedicated Brexit section.
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