The government heralded a new era for British commerce today as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida signed an £18bn investment deal, boasting it would cement Britain's status as a "global trade superpower." The agreement, reached after months of negotiations, promises thousands of jobs and billions in private investment, particularly in the green energy and technology sectors. But for the workers and families who have borne the brunt of a decade of stagnant wages and rising costs, the fine print matters more than the headline.
At a joint press conference in London, Sunak called the deal "a vote of confidence in the British economy" that would create 15,000 new jobs and boost trade between the two nations by 50 per cent. Key projects include a joint venture to develop floating offshore wind farms off the coast of Scotland and new Nissan models manufactured in Sunderland using Japanese technology. Nissan alone confirmed a £1bn investment, safeguarding 6,000 jobs and their supply chain.
But in communities like Sunderland, where a Nissan plant closure in 2019 devastated local employment, the news is met with cautious optimism. "We've heard promises before," said Margaret, a 54-year-old former factory worker. "It's all well and good saying you'll bring jobs, but will they be secure? Will they pay enough to live on?"
The deal is undeniably ambitious: it removes tariffs on 99 per cent of goods and opens up markets in digital trade, financial services, and data. Japan is the world's third-largest economy, and Britain hopes to be the gateway into Europe for Japanese firms post-Brexit. Yet critics warn that without corresponding domestic investment in skills and infrastructure, the jobs could remain an abstraction. The Resolution Foundation, a think tank focused on living standards, noted that UK R&D spending remains below the OECD average and that many of the new roles require qualifications held by only a third of the workforce.
Union leaders were also quick to remind the government that a trade deal alone does not guarantee higher wages. "If these jobs are to be a genuine boost for working people, they must come with real terms wage increases and strong employment rights," said Frances O'Grady, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress. "We cannot repeat the mistake of assuming any job is a good job."
For the Treasury, the deal is a welcome lift to post-pandemic recovery, promising £18bn of additional economic activity over the next five years. But the devil will be in the detail: who benefits from that growth? The Office for Budget Responsibility projects that trade deals can boost GDP by up to 0.4 per cent in the long term, but that is spread thin across a population of 67 million.
In the boardrooms of the City, champagne corks popped. In living rooms in Rotherham, Dudley, and Glasgow, the question remains: will my son get a job that lets him move out of this house?
Good trade policy must be judged not by the number of new investment pledges but by whether they lift real incomes for those at the bottom. This deal is a start, but the government cannot rely on it alone. It must complement it with policies that build a resilient, high-wage economy: better apprenticeships, stronger collective bargaining, and a social safety net that catches those left behind. Otherwise, the "global trade superpower" slogan rings hollow on the kitchen table still struggling to afford the week's shop.








