Bangkok Post

Japan keeps CPTPP bid at the fore

- CHATRUDEE THEPARAT

Japan is reinforcin­g support for Thailand’s membership in the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP), a newly formed bloc of 11 Pacific Rim nations.

Kiyama Shigeru, a special adviser to the Japanese government, met yesterday with Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripit­ak. Mr Shigeru said Japan is willing to support Thailand’s membership in the pact.

In July 2018, during a visit by Mr Somkid to Tokyo, Japan agreed to support Thailand becoming a member of the CPTPP.

Mr Somkid told Mr Shigeru the cabinet is expected to decide by April or May on whether Thailand will join the CPTPP.

The CPTPP is a trade agreement with Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.

A study by Bolliger & Company Thailand, commission­ed by the Trade Negotiatio­ns Department, found that participat­ion in the CPTPP would boost Thailand’s GDP by 0.12 percentage points or 13.3 billion baht in revenue a year.

Without CPTPP membership, Thailand is estimated to lose 26.6 billion baht worth of revenue, resulting in GDP contractin­g by 0.25 percentage points a year.

If the cabinet approves the Commerce Ministry’s proposal, Thailand will submit a formal request to join the CPTPP, possibly ahead of the CPTPP meeting in August.

Mr Somkid mentioned that Mr Shigeru said Japan remains committed to using Thailand as a production base and intends to invest in infrastruc­ture projects in Thailand, especially in highspeed rail networks, key infrastruc­ture projects in the government’s flagship Eastern Economic Corridor and connectivi­ty projects with Asean.

“Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced late last year US$3 billion in new initiative­s on investment and loan programmes for Asean, while urging Japan’s private sector and financial institutio­ns to play greater roles in Asean infrastruc­ture investment,” Mr Somkid said.

He said he urged Japan to invest in the Southern Economic Corridor and the rail network to link Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam via the upper East-West Economic Corridor, creating a network of Asean members.

Mr Somkid has scheduled a Feb 16-19 visit to Japan. He will meet Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, and high-ranking officials of the Japan External Trade Organisati­on, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, and private companies such as Sony, Norinchuki­n Bank, Zeon, Pan Pacific Internatio­nal Holding Group and Hokuetsu.

 ??  ?? Mr Somkid says Japan is committed to using Thailand as a production base.
Mr Somkid says Japan is committed to using Thailand as a production base.

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