National Post (National Edition)

Japan not reviving trade talks with Canada

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D The Canadian Press

OTTAWA • Japan wants Canada to join the fight against rising American protection­ism, but that doesn’t extend to reviving its own direct trade talks with Canada, says the Japanese ambassador.

Envoy Kenjiro Monji says Japan is still determined to save the 12-country TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p, despite president-elect Donald Trump’s vow to take the United States out of it. Japan hopes Trump can still be persuaded to back off from his opposition to TPP before his Jan. 20 inaugurati­on.

Japan and Canada hoped to deepen their economic ties through their joint membership in the massive Pacific Rim trade deal that would have brought together 40 per cent of the world’s economy.

Canada has for years set its sights on increasing trade with Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, but the two countries set aside work on a bilateral trade agreement in 2014 as the TPP talks progressed.

But Trump’s declaratio­n last week that he will begin the U.S. withdrawal from the TPP on Day 1 of his presidency appears to have killed the pact, because the U.S. accounts for more than half of the GDP of its 12 members.

TPP’s rules dictate that the deal can’t go ahead unless it has the backing of countries making up 85 per cent of the pact’s GDP — simple arithmetic that effectivel­y gives the U.S. and Japan the power to kill it.

Despite that, Monji said the agreement is not officially dead and, until it is, reviving talks in the Canada-Japan Economic Partnershi­p Agreement could send the wrong signal to Trump.

“We are not forgetting the bilateral Economic Partnershi­p Agreement,” Monji said in an interview. “It’s not the right timing to talk about bilaterals.”

Canada and Japan held seven rounds of two-way trade talks between 2012 and 2014. Leaked government documents showed that Japan rebuffed Canadian requests for an eighth round in 2015.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said the TPP is “meaningles­s” without the U.S. However, the Japanese leader has spent much domestic political capital to win support for the deal, so any outright abandonmen­t of the deal would be a major setback for him.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has said he would like to find a way for the TPP’s other 11 countries to find a way to revive a version of the pact.

Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s internatio­nal trade minister, has said there’s no way the TPP can come into force without the U.S.

Freeland’s spokesman Alex Lawrence said the minister has “discussed trade opportunit­ies” with her Japanese counterpar­ts, including at last week’s APEC summit in Peru. But he stopped short of characteri­zing that as anything resembling bilateral trade negotiatio­ns.

“Japan is a long-standing and important partner for Canada,” Lawrence said.

“We will continue to explore ways in which we can expand our commercial relations and our progressiv­e trade agenda with the AsiaPacifi­c region.”

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