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What does the Trump victory mean for UK businesses?

What does the Trump victory mean for UK business?

The news that Donald Trump won the US presidential election shocked the world this week and media outlets have started speculating what the world will look like when he takes office. Now company leaders from the UK200 Group have weighed in with their thought’s on what Trump’s term could mean for UK businesses.

Liz Ward, Principal at UK200Group member firm Virtuoso Legal said: “I have real concerns that the US will harden its position on international trade and it will become more difficult for overseas businesses to take their goods and services to the US market. The US already makes it difficult for the importation of some goods, especially software and some cutting-edge technologies such as pharmaceutical products and biosimilars (synthesised human hormones etc). A more protectionist president won’t seek to reduce barriers; he will seek to increase them. This will set back technological advances by years and harm much of the intangible capital the UK has to offer.

“I also suspect that a Trump administration will undermine real progress in green technology generally. Trump has already dismissed global warming and there will be no encouragement of reducing carbon emissions under his administration. Again, this is another area where the UK has leading scientific advancement to offer.”

Fellow UK200Group member Charles Olley, Partner of accountants Price Bailey said: “I am delighted that Donald Trump has been elected. Career politicians who spend their lives inventing policies and rules for everyone else again feel the wrath of the voters, just as they did or should do with the Brexit vote. There is so much waste to come out of both the US and UK administrations and wider public economy, and I feel sure Donald will find some of it.”

Tim Watkins, Managing Director of UK200Group member accountancy firm Randall & Payne said: “The business community thrives on certainty, and at the moment we have a number of doubts about the future, which we are all doing our best to deal with. A victory for the Republicans may mean we are nearer the front of the queue for a post-Brexit trade deal but perhaps we can expect an element of isolationism on the part of the US going forward.”

Peter Duff, Partner at law firm Morisons LLP and Vice-President of the UK200Group, said: “Post-Brexit UK businesses, in particular the SME market, are facing a period of uncertainty with which it is difficult to cope. The election of a president who has no political experience and has never operated at the top level of international politics, who is viewed with scepticism by the markets, will create further uncertainty until we see what experience he can garner around him.”

James Abbott, Managing Director at accountants Abbott Moore and President of the UK200Group, said: “With such a polarising result, I am concerned by the implications of having such a significant part of the USA that adamantly disagrees with the outcome of this election. I don’t want to over-emphasise the significance of that, but it must affect behaviour. That creates the risk of more uncertainty, which has implications for economies the world over.”