Bangkok Post

Decision on Thai TPP membership ‘likely in April’

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Thailand will likely decide whether to join a revised 11-member TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP) free trade pact around April, Japan’s economy minister said yesterday.

Yasutoshi Nishimura, a state minister in charge of the TPP, told reporters after talks with Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripit­ak that he hopes current member countries will make a decision to start accession talks with Thailand at a ministeria­l meeting this summer.

Arrangemen­ts are being made for the TPP ministers’ gathering in Mexico around August, according to Japanese officials.

The pact, formally known as the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, entered into force in December 2018 with the 11 members after the United States withdrew from the original TPP in January 2017.

So far, seven members — Japan, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Mexico, Singapore and Vietnam — have ratified the pact while Chile, Peru, Brunei and Malaysia have yet to do so.

“It’s preferable that we can start negotiatio­ns with Thailand after [the TPP] is ratified by as many countries as possible,” Mr Nishimura said.

Japanese manufactur­ers such as auto-parts makers have their production bases in Thailand.

Britain, which left the European Union on Jan 31, is also eyeing joining the CPTPP. The move is backed by Japan, which has signed a free trade agreement with the European Union and a bilateral pact with the United States.

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