The EU–Australia Trade Deal: Why Execution Will Define Success for European Consumer Goods and Manufacturers

The agriculture component of the EU–Australia trade agreeme For European consumer goods and manufacturing firms, the EU–Australia trade agreement presents a clear but often misunderstood opportunity. Much of the attention tends to focus on tariffs and improved market access, but in practice, these are only part of the equation. Commercial outcomes in Australia are shaped […]
The EU–Australia Trade Deal: Opportunity for European Food Exporters – With Important Caveats

The agriculture component of the EU–Australia trade agreement has been among the most contested aspects of the negotiation. In Australia, many farming groups have been openly critical of the outcome. Concerns have centred on the scale of market access granted to European producers, the treatment of sensitive sectors, and the perceived imbalance between concessions made […]
The EU–Australia Trade Deal: A Strategic Opening for European Services and Digital Firms

For European companies, the EU–Australia trade agreement is often viewed through the lens of goods. But for services and digital businesses, that lens is incomplete. The agreement introduces a set of provisions that directly affect how these firms operate across borders – not only in entering Australia, but in structuring their broader Asia-Pacific presence. Digital […]
The EU–Australia Trade Deal: A Strategic Gateway to Asia-Pacific

The EU–Australia Free Trade Agreement marks more than the conclusion of a long negotiation. It introduces a new operating framework for European companies engaging with one of the world’s most stable and strategically positioned economies. Much of the discussion has focused on market access into Europe. For European firms, the more relevant question runs in […]
Why China’s Industrial Power Matters More Than Tariffs

As President Donald Trump meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing this week, headlines have focused on tariffs, Taiwan, artificial intelligence, and the war in Iran. But beneath the diplomatic theatre lies a deeper reality shaping the global economy: the United States and China remain profoundly interconnected through industrial supply chains.
The Trump–Xi Summit and the New Rules of Global Business

As US President Donald Trump meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing this week, much of the media coverage has focused on the immediate issues on the table: Iran, Taiwan, trade, artificial intelligence, and energy security. But to view this summit simply as a bilateral diplomatic event is to miss the bigger story.
What does the US-China trade war mean for Australia?

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’re probably aware of the US-China trade war. Over the past year, the world’s two largest economies have imposed tariffs on billions of dollars worth of one another’s goods. US President Donald Trump has long accused China of unfair trading practices and intellectual property theft. In China, there […]