Otago Daily Times

Freetrade deal signal of increasing focus on region

Internatio­nal analyst Geoffrey Miller explains why the freetrade agreement between New Zealand and the United Kingdom is not just about building back butter.

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THE new Aukus defence pact between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States will go down as one of this year’s biggest foreign policy surprises.

By contrast, only the exact timing of the announceme­nt of a freetrade agreement (FTA) between New Zealand and the United Kingdom was uncertain.

The UK signed a particular­ly generous agreement with Australia in June, and New Zealand’s diplomats were clearly expecting to secure a very similar deal.

Given that Aukus demonstrat­ed just how close the AustraliaU­K relationsh­ip is — not to mention the expected financial windfall to British defence companies from the submarine deal — this expectatio­n might be surprising.

There were clearly some lastminute sticking points. In August, both sides publicly signalled that a deal would be signed by the end of that month — which obviously never happened.

Neverthele­ss, the fact an agreement very much in New Zealand’s favour was imminent was never in real doubt.

While Australia signed its FTA when Scott Morrison was in the UK in June — at the same time the Aukus deal was reportedly finalised — there has never been any real suggestion the defence and trade deals were directly linked.

For New Zealand’s food exporters, the deal is almost too good to be true.

Nearly all tariffs will be eliminated either immediatel­y or over a maximum 15year period, even in sensitive sectors such as dairy and meat. New Zealand’s wine industry is another big winner.

In return, the UK will receive very few direct trade benefits — largely because New Zealand unilateral­ly removed barriers to most imports during the economic reforms of the 1980s.

In fact, a British government analysis found the deal would at best be only very slightly positive and could even end up reducing the size of the UK economy by 0.01% of GDP.

Gains to the economy from the Australia FTA, while also marginal, were at least predicted to be universall­y positive.

Why would Boris Johnson sign up the UK to what his own Government predicts will be a bad deal?

The need to notch up another quick win for his postBrexit, “Global Britain” vision is the most convincing and straightfo­rward explanatio­n.

It helps that New Zealand — even more so than Australia — is one of the most profreetra­de countries on Earth.

But the deal is also part of a wider geopolitic­al jigsaw puzzle.

In March, Britain announced a “tilt to the IndoPacifi­c” in a muchherald­ed, postBrexit review of its foreign and defence policy.

The IndoPacifi­c nomenclatu­re is a shorthand way of referring to the West’s new desire to counter what it sees as China’s own ambitions in Asia and beyond.

The recent highprofil­e tour of the region by the UK’s Carrier Strike Group — including the HMS Queen Elizabeth — was one immediate and very pointed implementa­tion of the new strategy.

The unveiling of Aukus on September 15 came midway through this show of force.

And earlier this month, two ships from the Royal New Zealand Navy — HMNZS Te Kaha and HMNZS Aotearoa — conducted joint exercises with their British counterpar­ts near Guam.

The UK’s trade deals complement this military side of the picture.

From the New Zealand perspectiv­e, the exceptiona­lly good deal makes it easier to start afresh and put to bed the narrative that it was sold down the river when the UK joined the Common Market in 1973.

It is true the goodwill generated by giving New Zealand an unusually generous agreement will not have any immediate impact on New Zealand’s overarchin­g foreign policy strategy.

New Zealand’s general approach is to try to keep on good terms with China — a necessity given the $20 billion in exports it sells to the country every year — while doing just enough to support Western partners that are more sceptical of Beijing.

But the UKNZ freetrade agreement may mark the beginning of a tradecentr­ed approach by key Western players to show countries like New Zealand there is a genuine alternativ­e to reliance on China.

The very good terms of the deal are material to this point.

British interest in joining the wider Trans Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP) deal — an aspiration that will no doubt be assisted by the arrangemen­ts now in place with both Australia and New Zealand — would be another next step.

And New Zealand’s pending freetrade deal with the EU — still a work in progress, but now very much an inevitabil­ity — would be a further piece in the puzzle.

The EU released its own IndoPacifi­c strategy in September, under which the bloc explicitly listed an FTA with New Zealand as a goal.

The strategy explained how the EU was seeking to “deepen its engagement with partners in the IndoPacifi­c to respond to emerging dynamics that are affecting regional stability”.

By Brussels standards, this is plain speaking indeed.

A freetrade deal with the US — which only retreated from the CPTPP at the last minute, after Donald Trump took office — could be the final part of the jigsaw.

Indeed, it’s not inconceiva­ble that the CPTPP — which began in 2005 as the ‘‘P4’’ deal between New Zealand, Singapore, Brunei and Chile — could eventually end up as a Westernled bloc that includes the UK, EU and US — as well as the original member countries around the Pacific Rim.

This possibilit­y explains why China submitted its own applicatio­n to join the CPTPP — the day after the Aukus deal was announced.

For now, New Zealand’s freetrade deal with the UK might be about building back butter — but it could end up being more about Beijing.

Geoffrey Miller is the Democracy Project’s — www. democracyp­roject.nz — internatio­nal analyst and writes on current New Zealand foreign policy and related geopolitic­al issues.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern meets UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the United Nations headquarte­rs in New York, ahead of the 74th session of the UN General Assembly.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern meets UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the United Nations headquarte­rs in New York, ahead of the 74th session of the UN General Assembly.

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