Los Angeles Times

Trans- Pacif ic pact is signed

The sweeping Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p deal faces an uncertain future.

- By Don Lee don. lee@ latimes. com Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro in Washington contribute­d to this report.

The U. S. and 11 other nations ink the sweeping free- trade agreement, which faces an uncertain future.

WASHINGTON — Representa­tives of the United States and 11 other Pacific Rim nations on Thursday formally signed a sweeping free- trade agreement reached last fall, setting in motion what is expected to be a hard battle for approval in national legislatur­es, none more contentiou­s than in the U. S.

Michael Froman, President Obama’s chief trade negotiator, beamed as he walked onstage during a signing ceremony in New Zealand, but back home it is looking increasing­ly unlikely that a congressio­nal vote on the deal will take place by summer. Major presidenti­al candidates continue to pan the accord and even leaders of the GOP, the party of free traders, have shown only lukewarm support for what Obama has made his top economic priority in the second term.

“I have some problems with the agreement,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.) told reporters Tuesday, reiteratin­g comments he has made since the text of the accord was released in November. “With both the Democratic candidates for president opposed to the deal and a number of presidenti­al candidates in our party opposed to the deal, it is my advice that we not pursue that, certainly before the election.

“And some would argue that it’s not fair to the voters for them not to consider what you might do after the election,” he added, suggesting the possibilit­y of a congressio­nal vote during the short lame- duck session in November and December.

The Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p agreement was concluded in October in Atlanta after more than five years of negotiatio­ns. The accord would be the largest regional trade pact in the world, binding together economies that make up nearly 40% of global economic output by eliminatin­g duties on thousands of goods and setting uniform rules on intellectu­al property, labor rights, the environmen­t and other areas affecting trade and investment across borders.

So far, only Malaysia has ratified the agreement. Representa­tives of Mexico and Australia indicated Thursday that it would be months, possibly year- end, before debate would be concluded and a f inal vote taken up by their respective lawmakers. The other countries are Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam and New Zealand.

Some nations will be waiting first for action in the U. S., where vehement opposition to the deal from Democratic lawmakers and many others has cast doubts about whether the Obama administra­tion can bring the agreement to implementa­tion. Obama’s hopes for enacting the legacy- making accord have been complicate­d by presidenti­al campaign politics — free trade is hardly a populist issue — and more recently by the stormy global economic climate and the possibilit­y of an economic slowdown in the U. S.

“The economy is going to grow more slowly; everybody’s ratcheted down their forecasts,” said Peter Moroci, a University of Maryland professor and former chief economist at the U. S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission. “It makes it more difficult to sell that thing,” he said of the trade accord. “When people aren’t doing well economical­ly, they’re more fearful of change.”

In recent weeks Froman and other Obama administra­tion officials have been working on Capitol Hill and across the country to highlight what they see as the significan­t overall economic gains for the country in expanding foreign markets for American- made goods and services. Obama has argued repeatedly that the Pacific pact is also crucial in strengthen­ing U. S. political leadership in the face of a rising China.

U. S. business groups have been generally slow and somewhat reserved in their endorsemen­t of the deal, though that may soon change.

“In the weeks ahead, the chamber will be ratcheting up its advocacy for the” Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p, said John Murphy, senior vice president for internatio­nal policy at the U. S. Chamber of Commerce.

Organized labor and other opponents of the partnershi­p, including various health, environmen­tal and consumer groups, have been campaignin­g hard against it for months. “We’re definitely mobilizing now,” said Thea Lee, deputy chief of staff at the AFL- CIO.

Analysts say Obama isn’t likely to submit the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p as legislatio­n to Congress until he is confident that it will be approved by both chambers. The president is also expected to wait until the Internatio­nal Trade Commission, an independen­t federal agency, releases an assessment of the deal’s economic effects. That report is due by May 18.

A study by the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, a think tank, has estimated that the pact would boost annual real incomes of Americans by $ 131 billion, or 0.5% of U. S. economic output, by 2030. But another study, by researcher­s at Tufts University, found significan­tly smaller income gains to the U. S. and said that the Pacific trade accord would probably lead to employment losses and increases in inequality.

 ?? David Rowland ?? MICHAEL FROMAN, the U. S. trade representa­tive, performs hongi ( a traditiona­l Maori greeting) with a Maori elder at the signing of the Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p free- trade agreement in New Zealand.
David Rowland MICHAEL FROMAN, the U. S. trade representa­tive, performs hongi ( a traditiona­l Maori greeting) with a Maori elder at the signing of the Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p free- trade agreement in New Zealand.

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