If your lucky in 2030 we may have some significant trade deals as the average negotiation time is about 10 years.
And in you view we are going to get a better deel than we could have got inside the EU as part of the single largest economy in the world with a turn over of 16 trillion?.
Chasey
You seem to be partial to a swig of the Kook-Aid yourself.....
Where does your 10 year average come from? Care to cite any independent references for that number?
By being part of the EU we had access to over 50 trade agreements (not necessarily the same as a trade deal, since some are customs unions or have development aims as well). Roughly 17 more are in process. These trade deals do not cover countries like the US, China, Australia, India and much of Africa and Latin America - some of these are being negotiated, but many are not:
http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2012/june/tradoc_149622.pdf
TTIP - the agreement that never happened - would have covered 45% of global GDP alone. Don't expect to see it come back to life any time soon. So, in its absence, how long would it take us to negotiate a UK-US trade deal? President Obama told us during the Brexit campaign that the UK would be at the back of the queue, but what does that actually mean? The TTIP negotiations between the EU and the US took 4 years before they failed, whereas the average length of time to negotiate a trade deal with the US is just 1.5 years - this from the World Economic Forum:
With Brexit in mind, just how long do trade deals take to agree? | World Economic Forum.
President Obama.....where is he now?
Where you are correct is that negotiating trade deals with the EU take a long time. We saw this with CETA, the recent Canadian deal, that took 7 long years to negotiate. This is because any agreement with the EU has to involve not just the European Commission, which negotiates on behalf of the EU, but also the individual member states. Hence the fact that the Walloons could bring the Canadian deal to a halt....until they came under pressure from Brussels.
This same principal was confirmed in the EU courts just this week, meaning that the current trade negotiation between the EU and Singapore has to be agreed and ratified by each individual country:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/16/business/economy/europe-trade-singapore-ecj.html?_r=0
The reality is that being part of the EU makes it more difficult to negotiate trade deals, not less.
The UK is the fifth largest economy in the world. You may find that we can be far more nimble when it comes to international trade without the EU to hold us back.