National Post

EU, Japan leaders asked to OK deal

- Aoife White Jonathan Stearns and

• The European Union and Japan overcame their difference­s on farm and car exports, paving the way for a free- trade agreement between two partners that make up more than a quarter of the world’s economic output.

“We’ve reached political agreement” on an EU-Japan trade deal at the ministeria­l level, EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said on Twitter on Wednesday. “We now recommend to leaders to confirm this at summit.”

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, European Commission chief Jean- Claude Juncker and EU president Donald Tusk are expected on Thursday to endorse the preliminar­y accord, which has been in the works since 2013.

Abe is seeking to establish Japan as a leader in global trade after U. S. President Donald Trump pulled out of the Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p agreement in January, underscori­ng his “America First” policy.

The EU- Japan pact is also a political triumph for Chancellor Angela Merkel as she prepares to host fellow leaders of the Group of 20 in Hamburg this week, an occasion the German government intends to use to champion open markets.

Under the agreement, the EU is phasing out its 10- per- cent import duty on cars from Japan, while the Japanese government is expanding access for European farm goods. Abe has met opposition from the agricultur­e lobby among lawmakers in his ruling Liberal Democratic Party who are emboldened by a plunge in popular support for the prime minister.

The accord, which would be the EU’s largest free-trade agreement, comes as the bloc is seeking to bolster its open- market credential­s in the face of Trump’s challenge to a global trade order establishe­d after the Second World War.

Talks between the two sides will continue i nto the fall, with a legal text outlining the agreement expected in the next few months, according to an official with knowledge of the discussion­s. The deal will eliminate 99 per cent of tariffs when fully enacted, said the official, who signalled that the time frame to scrap the EU’s import tariff on cars will be seven years. Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK said Wednesday that Japan would create a low- tariff quota for European cheese and abolish levies over 15 years.

Once the negotiator­s have finished their work, the European Parliament and the bloc’s national government­s would have to give their approval before the agreement could take provisiona­l effect, a process that isn’t guaranteed to succeed.

Last year, the Belgian region of Wallonia, using its leverage over Belgium’s federal government in commercial matters, nearly torpedoed a similar accord between the EU and Canada.

 ?? JOHN THYS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Japan Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida is welcomed by EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom at the EU headquarte­rs in Brussels on Wednesday. Negotiator­s for the EU and Japan have reached “political agreement” on a trade deal, Malmstrom said.
JOHN THYS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Japan Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida is welcomed by EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom at the EU headquarte­rs in Brussels on Wednesday. Negotiator­s for the EU and Japan have reached “political agreement” on a trade deal, Malmstrom said.

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