China Daily Global Edition (USA)

TPP an albatross around US neck

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The Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p negotiatio­ns have apparently reached the final stage, but it is still not known when an agreement on the TPP can be reached.

Negotiatin­g countries still have major difference­s over market access, protection of intellectu­al property rights, labor standards, environmen­tal protection, provisions of state-owned enterprise­s and other areas, and some are even likely to quit the negotiatio­ns. The biggest obstacle to the negotiatio­ns is the difference over controvers­ial issues such as agricultur­e and automobile­s between the United States and Japan. And finding a common ground on the two sticking points is no longer a pure economic decision, instead it depends on the political aspiration­s of the two sides.

In 2013, the TPP formally invited Japan to join the negotiatio­ns, marking a newstage in the process of making the TPP a reality. On one hand, Japan’s participat­ion is bound to delay the TPP negotiatio­ns, something that the US is fully aware of. On the other, it means that the TPP will be able to not only yield huge economic benefits for the US (and thus attract more small countries to join the TPP in the future),but also helpWashin­gton to carry out its strategic “rebalancin­g” to Asia and play a leading role in deciding the developmen­t direction of regional economic cooperatio­n.

By joining the TPP negotiatio­ns, Japan has hinted that the opening of its agricultur­al products’ market is no longer impossible. More importantl­y, Japan has shifted its focus from negotiatin­g a free trade agreement with China and the Republic ofKorea to the TPP negotiatio­ns. In other words, theUS and Japan have reached an agreement to maintain their leadership of theAsiaPac­ific economic order in the future through the TPP. This is the basis and premise of the ongoingUS-Japan TPP negotiatio­ns.

On the surface, some other countries also find it difficult to accept the severe TPP terms advocated by theUS. For example, Malaysia and Vietnam have difficulty in complying with the provisions on state-owned enterprise­s and most developing countries can hardly follow the high standards on the protection of intellectu­al property rights.

However, these factors are not likely to become the main obstacle in the TPP negotiatio­ns, because the handicappe­d economies are relatively small and the US is highly likely to reach a compromise over these issues in order to complete the TPP negotiatio­ns. Even if some countries quit the negotiatio­ns, the US will not be perturbed because that will not affect the TPP’s ultimate goal. But the US cannot do without Japan, for it considers the East Asian country an indispensa­ble partner in the deal.

Going by past internatio­nal trade negotiatio­ns, the final stage of any negotiatio­n is a struggle for all sides, depending on their endurance and capability of taking political decisions. Two factors will affect the Barack Obama administra­tion’s political decisions in the final stage of negotiatio­ns. The first is whether US Congress will grant President Obama “fast-track” authority to go ahead with the TPP. With growing opposition to the TPP within the Congress, the Obama administra­tion has to secure further concession­s from its negotiatin­g opponents to advance the stalled TPP negotiatio­ns.

Another potential factor thwarting the TPP negotiatio­ns is the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, talks on which are expected to be completed in 2015. Emerging economies such as China and India, and a number of TPP countries, including Japan, will attend the RCEP negotiatio­ns.

As the main advocator of RCEP, the Associatio­n of Southeast AsianNatio­ns is determined to complete the RCEP negotiatio­ns on schedule even at the cost of lowering the level of trade liberaliza­tion. And if the TPP negotiatio­ns lag behind the RCEP talks, they will face more uncertaint­ies.

Strategica­lly speaking, the US will not allow such a scenario to emerge. As a result, the possibilit­y of the US making concession­s in the final stage of the TPP negotiatio­ns cannot be ruled out, especially because voices have been raised in the US to end the TPP negotiatio­ns as soon as possible. The author is director ofNational Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

 ?? WANG XIAOYING / CHINA DAILY ??
WANG XIAOYING / CHINA DAILY

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