Fiji Sun

Asian Leaders Agree to Press on With Trans-Pacific Trade Pact Without US

THE COMPREHENS­IVE AND PROGRESSIV­E AGREEMENT FOR THE TPP (CPTPP) - SUSPENDS 20 PROVISIONS OF THE ORIGINAL TPP

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Eleven countries in an ambitious free trade deal, including Singapore, have agreed to go ahead without America after a week of drama when agreement seemed elusive.

They will stick to the core elements of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) agreed upon two years ago, but which the United States pulled out of in January.

What deal means

The deal substantia­lly lowers tariffs on a wide range of goods, and even without the US, remains attractive, although some had sought to weaken its onerous standards.

For Singapore companies, it offers access to a market of 500 million people with a combined output of US$10 trillion (F$20.57trillion). The new pact - the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for the TPP (CPTPP) - suspends 20 provisions of the original TPP, mostly on intellectu­al property.

It was reached at the sidelines of the annual leaders’ meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC), a grouping of 21 economies set up to liberalise trade across the region. All the TPP countries are members of APEC. Japan’s Economy Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said on Saturday (November 11) the CPTTP will enter into force after at least six members ratify it. Its members are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.

Speaking to Singapore reporters

after the APEC summit ended, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said it took “a lot of skill and determinat­ion and willingnes­s” among the 11 parties to agree not to renegotiat­e the pact, even though the circumstan­ces have changed.

“It is not easy to take the TPP that was designed for 12 countries, remove one and then have the remaining 11 reach an agreement almost the same as the original, because economic calculatio­ns change, strategic calculatio­ns change, and political calculatio­ns change.”

He added: “It is good that the countries have come this far. It is not quite settled yet, because you do not have a legal text. It has not yet been signed but the important parts have all been settled. That is

something we are happy with and I hope we are able to take it forward.”

The deal appeared to hit a major roadblock on Friday when a planned meeting of TPP leaders was shelved as Canadian PM Justin Trudeau did not attend. His trade minister Francois-Philippe Champagne later put this down to “a misunderst­anding about the schedule”.

Business groups cheered the deal, including the Singapore Business Federation, whose chief executive officer Ho Meng Kit said he “looked forward to the speedy conclusion and subsequent implementa­tion of the restructur­ed agreement.”

It was reached at the sidelines of the annual leaders’ meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC), a grouping of 21 economies set up to liberalise trade across the region. All the TPP countries are members of APEC.

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