The Borneo Post

Quick signoff on TPP trade deal far from sure at summit

-

DANANG, VIETNAM: Continuing disagreeme­nts over the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p ( TPP) trade deal ditched by US President Donald Trump mean 11 remaining members may not be ready to give it a wholeheart­ed go- ahead at a summit this week, officials said yesterday.

Clear agreement on proceeding without the United States would be a boost for the principle of multilater­al free trade pacts over the bilateral deal-making that Trump argues will give a better result for American workers.

The TPP is also a counterwei­ght to China’s growing regional dominance.

Japan has been lobbying hard for agreement on the sidelines of this week’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) summit in Vietnam.

However, officials from several member states said there was less appetite to move ahead quickly from some members – notably Canada, New Zealand and Malaysia.

The pact aims to eliminate tariffs on industrial and farm products across a bloc whose trade totalled US$ 356 billion last year.

It also has provisions for protecting everything from intellectu­al property to labour rights to the environmen­t.

Chief negotiator­s from the TPP11 countries met on Monday and Tuesday.

Their ministers are due to meet on Wednesday and Thursday in the Vietnamese seaside resort of Danang. A meeting of TPP leaders, who are all also in APEC, has been tentativel­y scheduled.

“Our view is that we need to take the time to get the right deal,” said one Canadian official who declined to be identified.

Canada’s position is complicate­d by the fact that it is also renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with a

Our view is that we need to take the time to get the right deal.

Trump administra­tion that pulled the United States out of the TPP agreement in one of its first acts.

New Zealand’s new government has voiced support for the TPP, but Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said it was too early to say a deal could be reached this week.

“We see a real responsibi­lity to come in and make sure that the agreement is in the best interest of New Zealand,” she said.

For Malaysia, the main benefit of joining the TPP was the removal of tariffs on exports to the United States.

With an upcoming election and strengthen­ing ties with Beijing, it has less incentive to rush ahead.

Vietnam itself had been seen as potentiall­y the biggest beneficiar­y of the TPP when it included the United States.

“Vietnam will work actively with other economies to reduce the gap between them to ensure the balance of interests after the United States decided to withdraw,” Vietnam’s deputy foreign minister, Bui Thanh Son, told a news conference on Tuesday.

TPP trade ministers from the 11 remaining members agreed to move ahead without the United States at a meeting in Vietnam in May, but asked their negotiator­s to look at what might need changing ahead of the meeting in Danang.

Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono told his Vietnamese counterpar­t on Tuesday that he hoped TPP-11 countries could reach an agreement in principle this week, a Japanese foreign ministry spokesman told a briefing in Danang on Tuesday. — Reuters

Canadian official

 ??  ?? A worker at the internatio­nal airport walks past a signboard welcoming visitors to the AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) Summit in the central Vietnamese city of Danang on November 8. — AFP photo
A worker at the internatio­nal airport walks past a signboard welcoming visitors to the AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) Summit in the central Vietnamese city of Danang on November 8. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia