Khaleej Times

Decisions elusive at TPP meeting

- Rosalba O’Brien and Antonio De la Jara

These 11 countries have been negotiatin­g with each other for eight or nine years, so we know a lot about each other Todd McClay, New Zealand Trade Minister

— Ministers and officials representi­ng the 12 countries of the failed Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP), plus China and South Korea, began talks in Chile, but any concrete decision on how a new trade pact might look seemed far off.

The TPP, which would have included about 40 per cent of the world’s gross domestic product, was effectivel­y torpedoed after US President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement in January.

Chile, a keen free-trade enthusiast and one of the signatorie­s of the original agreement, invited TPP representa­tives to its Pacific-facing coastal city of Vina del Mar to try to thrash out a way forward.

But officials said the conversati­on is just the beginning of a long and uncertain road.

“We see this as an opportunit­y to have a frank round-the-table conversati­on to gauge where each of the countries are and then to work out how we might consider what next steps there may be, if there are any,” New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay told

Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the conference. “I’m not coming here expecting to make any decisions this week.”

However, McClay expressed optimism that “there is life still in the TPP” and said he expected the signatory countries to clarify a way ahead “in a few months.”

Chile said its best hope at this point was more meetings.

“If we can get some clarity on what is ahead then that more than justifies the meeting,” Foreign Minister Heraldo Munoz told reporters.

The United States will represente­d by its ambassador to Chile, while China, which criticised the TPP and was not part of it, has sent its special envoy for Latin America, Yin Hengmin.

Both China and Chile have emphasized that the meeting — officially, the “High Level Dialogue on Integratio­n Initiative­s in the Asia-Pacific Region” — is not just about the TPP.

Nonetheles­s, what future, if any, the trade deal may have appears to be the dominant discussion topic over the two-day meeting. Possibilit­ies include redesignin­g it without the United States or building instead on the proposed Southeast Asian-backed Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p.

Signatorie­s may also use the TPP as a springboar­d for new bilateral deals, Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray said.

Certainly, officials say, there is a reluctance to scrap the TPP entirely. “These 11 countries have been negotiatin­g with each other for eight or nine years, so we know a lot about each other,” said McClay.

 ?? — AP ?? Japanese government representa­tive Takao Ochiat the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p meeting in Vina del Mar, Chile.
— AP Japanese government representa­tive Takao Ochiat the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p meeting in Vina del Mar, Chile.

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