The Asian Age

RCEP pact shapes up without India

- MATTHEW TOSTEVIN

Although India pulled out at the last minute, China and 14 other countries agreed in Bangkok this week on plans for what could become the world’s biggest trade agreement — the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP).

They aim to sign it next year to start freeing up trade between members that include the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

What will RCEP do? Exact details have yet to be released, but it will progressiv­ely lower tariffs across many areas.

Its backers say that just as importantl­y it will let companies export the same product anywhere within the bloc without having to meet separate requiremen­ts and fill out separate paperwork for each country.

“For a goods producer it’s huge,” said Deborah Elms of the Asian Trade Centre. “What we don’t have now is a lot of Asian trade for final markets in Asia. This sets that up.”

It gives an incentive for companies to build supply chains within the region even if they export outside.

The agreement also touches on services and on protecting intellectu­al property.

What doesn’t it do? RCEP is not seen as such a “high quality” trade agreement as the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, among 11 Asia-Pacific countries, because it does not cover or harmonise as much.

Tariffs are agreed between countries rather than across the board. For some countries, sensitive issues such as agricultur­e won’t be touched. It lacks provisions for liberalisi­ng state enterprise­s or protecting workers and the environmen­t.

What economic impact will it have?

Even once signed, implementa­tion would take months to start and years to complete. The complexity makes precise calculatio­ns hard, economists say.

The 15 participat­ing countries make up nearly a third of the world’s people (it would have been nearly half with India). RCEP members account for nearly a third of global domestic product, with India’s departure making less of a difference.

What does India’s absence mean?

India can join later and other countries — notably Indonesia and Japan — have been lobbying it hard to stay. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi was emphatic about rejecting terms the other members agreed.

“While India’s exit devalues the pact, it also removes the single biggest obstacle to its completion,” said Anthony Nelson of consultanc­y Albright Stonebridg­e.

India’s biggest concern is a wave of cheap goods from China and elsewhere. For other countries, losing India means they won’t access a market that is notoriousl­y hard to get into, but also they won’t be able to include India as easily in supply chains. Supporters of the deal argue that India will lose investment while its consumers will pay more than they should.

Southeast Asian countries also see India as a counterwei­ght to China’s growing dominance.

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