The Jerusalem Post

Trans-Pacific trade deal advances without US

- • By KIYOSHI TAKENAKA and MAI NGUYEN

DANANG, Vietnam (Reuters) – Countries in the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal have agreed on the core elements to move ahead without the United States, officials said on Saturday, after last-minute resistance from Canada raised new doubts about its survival.

Taking the agreement forward is a boost for the principle of multilater­al trade pacts after President Donald Trump ditched the TPP early this year in favor of an “America First” policy he believes will save US jobs.

Talks – often heated – have been held on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) summit in the Vietnamese resort of Danang, where Trump and other leaders held their main meeting on Saturday.

“We have overcome the hardest part,” Vietnam’s trade minister, Tran Tuan Anh, told a news conference.

The agreement, which still needs to be finalized, would now be called the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP), he said.

Japanese Economy Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said he hoped that moving ahead with the deal would be a step towards bringing back the United States.

Partly to counter China’s growing dominance in Asia, Japan had been lobbying hard for the TPP pact, which aims to eliminate tariffs on industrial and farm products across the 11-nation bloc whose trade totaled $356 billion last year.

Some 20 provisions of the original agreement were suspended. Those included some related to protecting labor rights and the environmen­t, although most were related to intellectu­al property – one of the main sticking points after the US withdrawal.

“The overall impact on most firms is quite modest,” said Deborah Elms of the Asian Trade Center think tank, adding that the new version was “essentiall­y identical to the original document.”

Doubts

Any kind of deal looked doubtful on Friday, when a summit of TPP leaders was called off after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau did not attend. Canada’s trade minister later blamed Trudeau’s absence on “a misunderst­anding about the schedule.”

Canada, which has the second-biggest econowmy among remaining TPP countries after Japan, had said it wanted to ensure an agreement that would protect jobs.

Canada’s position has been further complicate­d by the fact that it is simultaneo­usly renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement with the Trump administra­tion.

In a speech in Danang, Trump sent out a strong message that he was only interested in bilateral deals in Asia that would not disadvanta­ge the United States.

Chinese President Xi Jinping used the same forum to stress multilater­alism and said globalizat­ion was an irreversib­le trend.

The APEC leaders met in closed sessions on Saturday, pausing for the traditiona­l “family photograph,” taken above the South China Sea.

At the start of the meeting, Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang noted APEC’s success in removing barriers to trade – as well as the new uncertaint­y in the world.

“We have witnessed changes more rapid and complex than we expect,” he said in opening remarks.

APEC trade and foreign ministers released a joint statement on Saturday, three days later than planned because of wrangling over customary language the United States wanted to change.

The statement still refers to free and open trade, but it also refers to fair trade and to members “improving adherence to rules agreed upon.”

A reference to strengthen­ing the multilater­al trading system was dropped. The ministers also said they would work to improve the functionin­g of the World Trade Organizati­on – which Trump criticized in Friday’s speech.

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