Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Getting Asia’s act together on trade

- BY ANU EDITORIAL BOARD

Populism and anti-globalisat­ion are gripping much of the West. The United States and United Kingdom, for example, are conflicted in different ways over trade and globalisat­ion.

President Trump’s ‘America first’ agenda has created much uncertaint­y about the US leadership of the global economy and its commitment to the multilater­al free trade system. And there seems to be no end in sight, as the Democrats are locking themselves into positions similar to those of Trump on trade and China as they battle it out for the left in the US primaries for the presidenti­al election in 2020. The new British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is racing Brexit towards a no-deal divorce from the European Union in October.

The upheavals in the United States and United Kingdom offer an important lesson for economic policymake­rs. Opening economies up to internatio­nal commerce, ideas and migration has lifted billions out of poverty and brought prosperity to much of the world. But that success is conditiona­l on getting domestic policies right.

The harsh lessons from the rise of populism are clear: those countries that managed to distribute the gains of globalisat­ion across society, maintain full employment and ensure a high level of social security are not suffering the same backlash that’s evident in the United States.

The first line of defence for countries, therefore, is to get their own houses in order.

But what else do other countries need to do in the face of a United States that is actively applying Wto-illegal tariffs on imports from other countries and threatenin­g to render the enforcemen­t of global trade rules in the WTO ineffectiv­e? Brexit is a blow to the global economic system as well but the United Kingdom is a much smaller part of the global economy and doing its best to make itself even smaller.

What’s needed most is collective action, to defend the multilater­al system. There was an early sign of this in Trump’s presidency when Japan led the conclusion of the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p without the United States. But since then the going has been tougher.

The news is not all bad. As Peter Drysdale and Mari Pangestu explain in our lead feature this week, ‘the past 10 days have seen two developmen­ts in global trade diplomacy that seem to offer important ways to deal with the US leadership deficit and, hopefully, over the long term, to attract the United States back into more productive global economic engagement’.

The first is an initiative by the European Union (EU) and Canada. As Drysdale and Pangestu explain, the EU and Canada have agreed to a ‘workaround of the US blockage on appointing judges to the WTO appellate body. Their solution is to create a shadow appellate body to rule on future disputes between the EU and Canada, using retired appellate judges’. Importantl­y, ‘Brussels and Ottawa have effectivel­y issued an open invitation to other government­s to participat­e’.

This is the bottom-up solution that the WTO has been waiting for. Instead of waiting until December when the US veto of judges to the appellate body causes the whole dispute settlement system to become ineffectiv­e, countries can replicate and improve on the existing system. The WTO rules may be out of date and the dispute settlement system has its own problems but the organisati­on still enforces multilater­al trade rules for its 164 members. China, the world’s largest trader, has more at stake in those rules than most.

The other developmen­t is the justconclu­ded meeting of trade ministers from East Asian countries in Beijing to try to finalise the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) agreement by the end of this year. It’s only the second ministeria­l meeting for the RCEP group to be held outside an ASEAN country, after Japan hosted the ministers last year.

With China, India, Australia, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand negotiatin­g around the ASEAN hub, the agreement accounts for almost 40 percent of global trade and 45 percent of the world’s population. The scale alone means that RCEP will be an agreement that locks in reforms and opening of strategic importance globally and gives multilater­alism a boost.

The ministers appear to realise the urgency in concluding the agreement that has eluded them for too long. Developmen­ts elsewhere in North America and Europe are affecting the growth outlook everywhere. East Asia needs this agreement to make progress between countries in a region where bilateral difficulti­es and tensions persist.

Bilateral agreements between many in the RCEP grouping are too politicall­y difficult to conclude but agreement multilater­ally comes a little easier. Exhibit A is Japan and South Korea that are descending into a lose-lose economic war. But the region-wide agreement can help these difficult pairings to progress their economic relations.

The biggest hold-out has been India, which fears opening up to China and having its industries wiped out. As Southeast Asia’s experience suggests, these fears have little basis. India needs to make important decisions about its economic future. At this time of crisis in multilater­al trade the rest of East Asia can ill afford to wait. The imperative to conclude RCEP this year in defence of multilater­al trade is an objective that has now rightly gathered strength across the region.

(Courtesy East Asia Forum) (The EAF Editorial Board is located in the Crawford School of Public Policy, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University)

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