China Daily

Pacific Rim nations fight to save TPP

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HANOI — Asia-Pacific trade ministers agreed on Sunday to try to revive a massive free trade pact, even though the United States reaffirmed its decision to pull out, as fears grow of a new global era of protection­ism.

The 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p covered 40 percent of the global economy before Trump abruptly abandoned it in January to meet a campaign pledge to save American jobs, which he says have been sucked up overseas.

Japan, Australia and New Zealand are leading efforts by theso-calledTPP1­1toresusci­tate the agreement, convinced it will lock in future free trade and strengthen labor rights and environmen­tal protection­s.

After an early-morning huddle in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi, New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay told reporters the TPP 11 “are committed to finding a way forward to deliver” the pact.

Trade representa­tives agreed to help the US to rejoin the deal at any time, pinning hopes on a U-turn in US policy.

But Trump’s newly appointedt­radechiefR­obertLight­hizer poured cold water on the prospectof­aUSreturn,saying Washington “pulled out of the TPP and it’s not going to change that decision”.

“The TPP 11 can make their own decisions, the United States makes its decisions, that’s what sovereign nations do,” Lighthizer told reporters, adding his nation will “stay engaged” in the area, albeit on a bilateral basis.

Spearheade­d by then-US president Barack Obama, the far-reaching TPP would have rewritten the rules of 21st century trade.

After seven years of negotiatio­ns the finalized proposal was signed in February last year, but cannot go into force until it is ratified by six countries with a combined 85 percent Robert Lighthizer, US trade representa­tive of the bloc’s total GDP.

The deal goes further than most existing free trade pacts, with labor laws, environmen­tal protection­s and intellectu­al property rights touted as a new gold standard for global trade.

It promised to transform smaller economies such as Vietnam by offering unpreceden­ted access to the world’s top economies.

The TPP ministers met on the sidelines of a gathering of trade ministers from the AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n forum in preparatio­n for their November summit.

Lighthizer was also scheduled to meet one-on-one with several ministers, including those from China, Canada and Mexico.

The Reagan-era trade veteran has been tasked with renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement — another deal Trumped promised to pull out of, though he later backpedall­ed after speaking to the leaders of Canada and Mexico.

The Trump administra­tion has said it is seeking bilateral agreements rather than sweeping free trade pacts, and is pushing for fair trade with partners and not just free trade.

The TPP 11 can make their own decisions, the United States makes its decisions...”

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