Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trans-Pacific allies move on without U.S.

- By Alexandra Stevenson and Motoko Rich

The New York Times

HONG KONG — President Donald Trump shook up the world economic order this year by pulling the United States out of a major internatio­nal trade pact and raising fundamenta­l questions about its global role.

On Saturday, the world is moving on without it.

A group of 11 countries announced Saturday that they had committed to resurrecti­ng a sweeping multinatio­nal trade agreement, the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p, without the United States. A new deal, which would have to be signed and ratified by each country, would include major U.S. allies like Japan, Canada and Mexico. Collective­ly, they account for about a sixth of global trade.

The agreement will “serve as a foundation for building a broader free-trade area” across Asia, Taro Kono, Japan’s foreign minister, said in a statement.

Pointedly, the potential members of what is now called the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p came to an early agreement on the broad outline of a deal while many of their leaders were meeting with Mr. Trump in Vietnam — itself a potential member of the new trading group.

Some details of a new deal, including when rules would be phased in, still need to be determined, and prospectiv­e member states like Canada raised lastminute concerns. But a new deal could be announced as soon as early next year.

Other countries are slowly but surely making progress on their own sweeping trade deals, without any participat­ion from the United States. China is negotiatin­g a potential deal with 16 Asia-Pacific countries, including Japan, India and South Korea. The European Union and Japan hope to strike separate trade pacts with a group of South American countries, Brazil andArgenti­na among them.

From tough talk on China (”they took our jobs”) to casting doubt on the decades-old North American Free Trade Agreement (”the worst trade deal ever made”), Mr. Trump has threatened to lob a grenade at an increasing­ly integrated global economic system.

His administra­tion has questioned years of efforts to lower global trade barriers, arguing that they hurt U.S. workers and led to big trade deficits. It also means dealing with nations one-on-one, rejecting the regional and global pacts his predecesso­rs pursued.

But other factors are pushing the rest of the world to fill the void left by the United States. China’s rise as a regional and economic power is drivingoth­er nations either to join with it or to join together to counter it. Fast developmen­t in places like Southeast Asia means potential new markets for all kinds of products. The absence of the United States means potential opportunit­ies for others.

“At some point, the administra­tion may begin to see that this was a strategic mistake and that dropping out of trade is not in the interest of American workers,” said Rufus Yerxa, president of the National Foreign Trade Council, a lobbying group that represents companies like Walmart, Ford and Microsoft.

More worrying for some is the possibilit­y that the Trump administra­tion is ceding its position as global leader to China, a rising economic and political influence in the region.

“The U.S. has lost its leadership role,” said Jayant Menon, an economist at the Asian Developmen­t Bank. “And China is quickly replacing it.”

Under the new Trans-Pacific trade deal, members would enjoy tariff-free trade with one another. That would allow companies in the member countries to have faster and better access to other markets than their U.S. rivals.

But there are still challenges ahead of the group, and not all the prospectiv­e member states meeting in Da Nang, Vietnam, were in complete accord over the finer details of a new deal.

“We are pleased that progress is being made towards a possible agreement, but there is still some work to be done,” François-Philippe Champagne, Canada’s minister of internatio­nal trade, said in a statement. He added that Canada would sign a deal only once its interests had been addressed.

Even without the United States, the deal would be the largest trade agreement in history. It is intended to increase protection­s for intellectu­al property in some countries, while opening more markets to free trade in agricultur­al products and digital services around the region. It also has provisions on improving working conditions, although there is debate about the likely results.

In a statement posted online, the Australian government said the agreement in principle demonstrat­ed the 11 countries’ “commitment to open markets, to combat protection­ism and to advance regional economic integratio­n.”

The 11 countries working toward the new agreement are Japan, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Chile, Peru, New Zealand and Brunei.

Mr. Trump has expressed support for the nation’s regional allies even as he rejects or criticizes trade deals with them. He reiterated U.S. support for cooperatio­n on security during his stops in Japan and South Korea.

In China, he went out of his way to woo President Xi Jinping, going so far as to suggest that the trade deficit with the United States was the fault of past U.S. administra­tions ratherthan of China itself.

“I don’t blame China,” Mr. Trump said in a tweet Friday morning shortly before leaving for Vietnam.

In the absence of U.S. leadership, Japan has driven the new round of talks. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has spoken of the countries working on an agreement as Ocean’s Eleven, after the movie. Japan’s long-term hope is that the United States will eventually return to the fold.

 ?? Jorge Silva/Getty Images ?? World leaders take part in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit on Saturday in Vietnam.
Jorge Silva/Getty Images World leaders take part in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit on Saturday in Vietnam.

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