APEC leaders vow to fight
protectionism, look to China on trade
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[November 21, 2016]
By Mitra Taj and Jeff Mason
LIMA
(Reuters) - Pacific Rim leaders vowed on Sunday to fight protectionism
and Chinese officials said more countries are looking to join a
China-led trading bloc after Donald Trump's election victory raised
fears the United States would scrap free trade deals.
Trump campaigned for U.S. president on a promise to pull out of the
12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, and also
threatened to impose steep tariffs against China and Mexico.
Regional leaders responded on Sunday, saying they would push ahead with
the TPP.
"We reaffirm our commitment to keep our markets open and to fight
against all forms of protectionism," they said at a summit meeting of
the 21-country Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) group in Peru.
On his last foreign trip before he leaves the White House in January,
President Barack Obama said abandoning TPP would be a mistake for the
United States.
"I think not moving forward would undermine our position across the
region and our ability to shape the rules of global trade in a way that
reflects our values and our interests," Obama told a news conference at
the end of the summit.
Obama negotiated the TPP but has stopped seeking its congressional
approval and says its ratification is now up to the incoming Trump
administration.
China is not part of the TPP and has been pushing an alternative vision
of free trade in Asia under the so-called Regional Comprehensive
Economic Partnership (RCEP), which does not currently include countries
in the Americas.
Tan Jian, a senior member of China's delegation at the summit, said more
countries are now seeking to join its 16-member bloc, including Peru and
Chile, and that current members want to reach a deal as soon as possible
to counter rising protectionism.
In a final declaration, APEC leaders said the TPP and RCEP were both
valid paths to a broader Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific, which has
long been a goal of the APEC bloc that accounts for 57 percent of the
world economy.
"We encourage that all regional undertakings, including TPP and RCEP,
remain open, transparent and inclusive and draw on each other," they
said.
Some APEC leaders in Lima have suggested the TPP could continue without
the United States, but others said that would require a complete
renegotiation.
Another way forward might be to make some cosmetic changes that would
allow Trump to change his mind on the TPP without losing face, New
Zealand Prime Minister John Key suggested.
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Wearing a Peruvian shawl, U.S President Barack Obama poses for a
family photo at the APEC Summit in Lima, Peru November 20, 2016.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Obama said he was already hearing calls for a "less ambitious" free
trade agreement with fewer protections for workers and environmental
standards, a likely reference to the China-led RCEP.
"That kind of agreement would obviously exclude U.S. workers and
businesses and access to those markets," he said.
China's delegation warned against the "politicization" of trade
agreements and said they should not just be for rich economies.
"If you have such high standards, then developing economies will have
difficulty with trade," Jian told Reuters. A "low threshold for
developing economies ... that is also important."
Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, who hosted the summit, said it
was too early to write off the TPP and that Trump's support was due more
to "difficult economic conditions" than to fierce protectionist
sentiment.
Canada, a member of TPP but not RCEP, is keeping its options open on
future trade deals, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.
Australia, similarly, said it was pursuing various opportunities,
including RCEP.
"Well as I've indicated previously, Australia doesn't have all its eggs
in one basket," Trade Minister Steven Ciobo told reporters. "It's not a
case of the TPP is all that there is for Australia."
(Reporting by Rosalba O'Brien, Mitra Taj, Kiyoshi Takenaka, Jeff Mason,
and Caroline Stauffer; Additional reporting by Jane Wardell in Sydney;
Editing by Mary Milliken and Kieran Murray)
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