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Under the comprehensive pact's guidelines, special and differential treatment is allowed for poorer nations such as Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam. At the same time, flexibility clauses also allow members to drop trade policies with which they disagree and exclude sensitive industries from competition. While such flexibility makes it more attractive for developing nations to join the grouping, critics said it could also be a roadblock to greater integration and a handicap for countries unwilling to reform. Seven of the comprehensive partnership members -- Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand and Japan
-- are also involved in Trans-Pacific talks. Chile, Canada, Mexico, Peru and the United States are the other members in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which accounts for nearly 40 percent of global GDP and about a third of world trade. Negotiations on the Trans-Pacific pact began in 2005 and President Barack Obama's administration has said it hopes to wrap up talks by the end of this year. The pact is crucial to the U.S. as it seeks to reassert itself as an Asian and Pacific power, countering China. Washington has only a handful of trade agreements in Asia, unlike China which has inked pacts with many countries and recently restarted three-way free trade talks with South Korea and Japan. "America doesn't want China in the TPP but rather than saying it outright, they crafted the agreement so deeply that they know the Chinese can't do it," said Simon Tay, who heads Singapore's Institute of International Affairs. "At the moment, the regional comprehensive partnership is shallow, but healthy competition from the TPP can galvanize members to go a bit further to make it more meaningful."
[Associated
Press;
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