New Straits Times

China-led trade pact can fill TPP vacuum, says ADB

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BEIJING: The death knell sounding for a United States-led trade pact creates a vacuum that a separate Asia deal being championed by China should quickly fill, according to the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB).

Negotiator­s at the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) meeting in Indonesia this week would normally hold talks without much public scrutiny. But the latest round comes after US president-elect Donald Trump pledged he wouldn’t revive the alternativ­e known as the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP), once vaunted as the centrepiec­e of US economic engagement in Asia.

That has shifted focus to the RCEP, which would cover 30 per cent of the global economy and includes China and India among its 16 country members. Trump’s protection­ism potentiall­y creates a window for China to push along the timetable for the RCEP.

Arjun Goswami, a technical adviser with the ADB’s Economic Research and Regional Cooperatio­n Department, said the timeline for the conclusion of the pact was up to the countries involved.

“But with the prospects of ratifying TPP now receding, there is a vacuum which RCEP should try to fill by concluding negotiatio­ns expeditiou­sly,” said Goswami in an emailed response to questions. “Expectatio­ns are for the deal to be concluded in 2017.”

While the RCEP is much more a straight up and down trade deal compared to the TPP, which would extend to subjects including intellectu­al property and state-owned enterprise­s, it does have its own sticking points.

Some countries may favour greater trade and investment liberalisa­tion than others based on different levels of developmen­t, and “there may be differing views on the extent of coverage of RCEP trade and investment liberalisa­tion in terms of goods and services, with the latter posing greater challenges”, said Goswami.

“There is a slowdown in global and regional trade growth that is partly cyclical and partly structural. In addition, there is a risk of rising protection­ism fuelled by economic insecurity and inequality, which makes it more critical to have inclusive trade and investment flows with their effective utilisatio­n by small and medium enterprise­s.”

The RCEP aims to level tariffs and rules on the region’s supply chains, liberalise investment and introduce dispute-resolution mechanisms. Unlike the TPP, it would not require members to take steps to protect labour rights or improve environmen­tal standards. Bloomberg

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