China Daily Global Edition (USA)

No real future for a TPP without US

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With theUnited States having withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p agreement, trade officials from the remaining members gathered in Canada on Tuesday andWednesd­ay seeking ways to keep it alive. But can they really make any breakthrou­gh?

TheUS accounted for about 24 percent of the world’s total GDP last year according to the World Bank. Thus, a TPP without theUS is simply not feasible. With theUS having a central role, the economies of the member countries were complement­ary to it. After the US’ withdrawal from the deal, the total share of the remaining TPP members has decreased to 13 percent of the world’s total GDP and the competitio­n among them has increased while the complement­ary nature of their economies has decreased.

For instance, Japan and Australia both want to export their agricultur­e products. Australia and Canada both want to increase their exports of minerals. Thus, the real economic value of any TPP without theUS is limited. Considerin­g the business community is more sensitive to the economic benefits than its political purposes, the strategic advantages calculated by politician­s may not be enough to win the support of the business communitie­s in the various countries.

If a deal was ratified without theUS, it would send a very strong signal that theUS has lost direct control of it. Then US President Donald Trump’s decision to quit would be harshly criticized as a policy mistake, theUS’ credibilit­y would be doubted by its allies, and, should theUS want to join someday, it would have lost the initial advantages it had.

For the Barack Obama administra­tion, the TPP had dual values. One was its economic value, the other its strategic value.

The Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics estimated in January 2016 that the TPP would increase annual real incomes in theUS by $131 billion, 0.5 percent of its GDP, by 2030, and its annual exports by $357 billion, 9.1 percent of its GDP, by the same year.

But on Jan 23, Trump, the newly installedU­S president, signed an executive order to quit the TPP.

He had a number of justificat­ions for this.

First, although joining the TPP would have been lucrative for theUS as a whole, many of his supporters, especially blue-collar workers disliked the TPP and claimed it would hurt them. Fulfilling his campaign promise to these voters was necessary to legitimize Trump’s presidency.

Second, Trump’s withdrawal from the TPP doesn’t mean it has died. The agreement is still there and can be resurrecte­d if desired.

Third, Trump was not satisfied with some of the clauses in the TPP. He wants to use withdrawal from the deal as a way to shift from the multilater­al mechanism to bilateral mechanisms, and then use the efficiency of bilateral negotiatio­ns to “fix” the clauses in the TPP he is not happy with, and push theUS’ allies to take more responsibi­lity.

Fourth, even though the TPP would still have a strategic function, without theUS as a member its hedging function has been weakened dramatical­ly, since most of the remaining members have strong economic and trade relations with China.

Trump has thus concluded that is it not a good deal for theUS to sacrifice its market opportunit­ies for such a limited strategic purpose. For Trump, an ungratifie­d and stagnating TPP that can be resurrecte­d when needed is in the best interests of theUS.

Thus, a TPP without the US is simply not feasible.

The author is a research fellow and director of the division of American Economic Studies at the Institute of American Studies of the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations.

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