The Sun (Malaysia)

Completion of RCEP pushed back to 2019

> Asia-Pacific trade ministers fail to agree key terms at Singapore summit

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SINGAPORE: The completion of the world’s largest trade deal – backed by Beijing and excluding the United States – has been pushed back to next year, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said Tuesday, after Asia-Pacific trade ministers failed to agree key terms at a Singapore summit.

The Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), covering half the world’s population, is billed as an antidote to President Donald Trump’s “America First” agenda, which has seen tariffs imposed on almost half of all Chinese imports to the US – and retaliator­y levies by Beijing.

China hoped to have the meat of the deal – whose members include Japan, India and Southeast Asian nations – done by the end of this year as ballast to US tariffs and increasing­ly pugnacious rhetoric on trade. But the timetable has slipped, with sticking points over free access to markets remaining – and a raft of general elections early next year likely to further hamper its progress.

Speaking in Singapore, Li said he hoped RCEP would be signed and implemente­d next year.

“It (RCEP) is going to deliver real benefits to the people of our region,” he said, without giving a date.

China was now the standard bearer of global free trade, he added, with the 16-member RCEP deal at the heart of its strategy.

“It’s going to send a message to the internatio­nal community that we stand by free trade ... with rising protection­ism and strains on free trade, we need to advance the RCEP negotiatio­ns,” Li said.

He conceded the Chinese economy was facing “challenges” in the wake of the trade war with the US, but insisted strong fundamenta­ls meant radical interventi­on was not the remedy.

“Despite downward pressures we will not resort to massive stimulus,” Li said.

Trade diplomats said negotiatio­ns will run deep into 2019.

“We made significan­t progress,” New Zealand minister of state for trade and export growth Damien O’Connor told reporters after talks late Monday, but added delegates were “hopefully ready for conclusion next year.”

India’s concerns over opening its markets to competitio­n, in particular from Chinese firms, have been a key obstacle in the several years of negotiatio­ns.

But New Delhi’s delegation welcomed the incrementa­l steps towards establishi­ng the trade agreement.

“The future lies in RCEP,” Indian trade minister Suresh Prabhu told reporters, but urged a patient approach to talks to ensure “every country will benefit from it”.

Several general elections scheduled early next year – including in India, Thailand and Indonesia – have complicate­d the timeframe of a deal that will open markets in countries accounting for about a third of the world’s gross domestic product.

A draft leaders’ statement on the RCEP seen by AFP noted the urgency of reaching an agreement “given the current headwinds faced by the global economy”. – AFP

 ??  ?? Li speaking at the 44th Singapore Lecture on the sidelines of the 33rd Asean summit in Singapore yesterday.
Li speaking at the 44th Singapore Lecture on the sidelines of the 33rd Asean summit in Singapore yesterday.

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