The Sunday Guardian

US to rejoin Pacific trade pact if terms improve

Trade experts believe Trump is probably trying to placate his political base in the wake of criticism over the US-China tariff standoff.

- REUTERS

US President Donald Trump said the United States would only join the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p, a multinatio­nal trade deal his administra­tion walked away from last year, if it offered “substantia­lly better” terms than those provided under previous negotiatio­ns.

His comments, made on Twitter late Thursday, came only hours after he had unexpected­ly indicat- ed the United States might rejoin the landmark pact, and amid heightened volatility in financial markets as Washington locked horns with China in a bitter trade dispute.

Trump had told Republican senators earlier in the day that he had asked United States Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow to reopen negotiatio­ns.

In his Twitter post, which came during Asian trading hours, Trump said the United States would “only join TPP if the deal were substantia­lly better than the deal offered to Pres. Obama. We already have BILATERAL deals with six of the eleven nations in TPP, and are working to make a deal with the biggest of those nations, Japan, who has hit us hard on trade for years!”

Policymake­rs in the AsiaPacifi­c region on Friday responded to the possibilit­y of the US rejoining the trade deal with scepticism.

“If it’s true, I would welcome it,” Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters after a cabinet meeting on Friday and before Trump’s tweet. Aso added that the facts needed to be verified.

Trump “is a person who could change temperamen­tally, so he may say something different the next day”, Aso said.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, commenting after Trump’s tweet, said it would be “great” to have the US back in the pact though doubted it would happen.

“We’re certainly not counting on it,” Turnbull told reporters in Adelaide in South Australia.

The TPP, which now comprises 11 nations, was designed to cut trade barriers in some of the fastestgro­wing economies of the Asia- Pacific region and to counter China’s rising economic and diplomatic clout.

Trump, who opposed multilater­al trade pacts in his election campaign in 2016 and criticised the TPP as a “horrible deal”, pulled the U.S. out of the pact in early 2017. He argued bilateral deals offered better terms for U.S. businesses and workers, and signaled an intention to raise trade barriers.

But Trump is struggling to get support from other countries for his recent threat to impose import tariffs on China and the U.S. farm lobby is arguing that retaliatio­n by China would hit American agricultur­al exports.

Trade experts believe Trump is probably trying to placate his political base in the wake of criticism over the U.S.-China tariff standoff.

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