Otago Daily Times

NZ, Europe in round of freetrade talks

- PAUL MCBETH

WELLINGTON: New Zealand trade negotiator­s are trying to get their European counterpar­ts to recognise that the nation’s agricultur­al exports are small fry compared with the regional bloc’s farming sector.

The second round of freetrade negotiatio­ns between New Zealand and the EU is under way in Wellington, where 31 European officials are looking to progress a deal politician­s say they are keen to fasttrack.

In a public forum, the chief negotiator­s — Peter Berz for the EU and Martin Harvey of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade — said there was a lot of common ground, but agricultur­e was a sticking point.

Mr Harvey said New Zealand’s size was something trade negotiator­s always had to deal with.

While New Zealand’s agricultur­al exporters are wellknown, that reputation can inflate the perceived threat to other markets.

The 29member EU is the world’s largest agricultur­al trading entity.

‘‘Often the perception is way out of whack with what the reality is, both of current trade and what would actually happen under a liberalisa­tion scenario,’’ he said.

Mr Harvey drew on the EU’s impact assessment of freetrade agreements with both New Zealand and Australia to support his point. The modelling indicated a deal would increase EU exports of meat such as pork, dairy and other food and beverages, while New Zealand exports of dairy, beef and horticultu­re would rise. European beef production would face the biggest decline, while New Zealand beef and horticultu­re output, and dairy to a smaller extent, would increase.

Mr Berz said the EU was aware New Zealand’s primary export products were agricultur­al and that greater market access would be a key sticking point. However, agricultur­e came up as an issue in all the bloc’s negotiatio­ns, he said.

Mr Harvey said geographic­al indication­s — which restricts the use of regional names in the sale of products — would need to be worked through.

Both parties have been asked to pursue an ambitious agenda on sustainabl­e developmen­t goals to encourage better outcomes for areas including the environmen­t, labour rights, and corporate social responsibi­lity.

The EU is commission­ing a trade and sustainabi­lity impact assessment, which will analyse the agreement’s potential impacts on issues such as human rights, gender, and the environmen­t.

The negotiatio­ns are taking place against the backdrop of growing trade protection­ism, something Finance Minister Grant Robertson noted yesterday as a key risk to the domestic economy.

Meantime, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde yesterday opened the annual IMFWorld Bank meetings in Bali, Indonesia, with a speech entitled ‘‘How global trade can promote growth for all’’.

She said the three priorities in building a trade system that works for everyone involves cooling current disputes, modernisin­g the current system, and introducin­g domestic policies to ensure trade benefits more people. — BusinessDe­sk

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand