The United States and the European Union agreed yesterday to push for the launch by the end of June of talks to create a free trade alliance that could be a benchmark for global partners to follow.

A free trade deal would be the most ambitious ever attempted, encompassing half the world’s economic output and a third of global trade flows.

“These negotiations will set a standard, not only for our future bilateral trade and investment, including regulatory issues, but also for the development of global trade rules,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told a news conference.

Speaking after the release of a joint US/EU report recommending the start of talks, Barroso said the two were expected to launch negotiations in the first half of the year.

The report sees the EU’s economy gaining around 0.5 per cent and the US economy around 0.4 per cent by 2027, with €86 billion of added annual income for the former and €65 billion for the latter.

The report’s release comes a day after US President Barack Obama threw his weight behind a potential deal in his state of the union address.

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