TPP trade pact in disarray as Canada holds up talks
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[November 10, 2017]
By Mai Nguyen and Matthew Tostevin
DANANG, Vietnam (Reuters) - Efforts to
revive the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal foundered on
Friday when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau failed to show up for
a meeting to agree a path forward without the United States.
The lack of a deal on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) summit underscored the convulsions in global trade
policy since U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned the TPP early this
year in the name of an "America First" approach.
Speaking ahead of the APEC summit, Trump said he only wanted bilateral
trade deals in Asia - and deals in which the United States was not at a
disadvantage.
It was left to President Xi Jinping of China to champion a
multilateralist vision of trade with a speech in the Vietnamese resort
city of Danang that described globalisation as an irreversible trend.
It was partly to counter China's growing dominance in Asia that Japan
had been lobbying hard for the TPP pact, which aims to eliminate tariffs
on industrial and farm products across an 11-nation bloc whose trade
totaled $356 billion last year.
Japan said ministers from the 11 remaining countries reached broad
agreement to push ahead with it on Thursday, though Canada had said that
was not true.
The leaders of 10 of the countries arrived for a meeting on Friday, but
officials said Trudeau did not.
"The Canadian side said today they are not yet at the stage where its
leader can confirm the agreement reached among ministers," Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters, adding that all the other
leaders had agreed.
Canadian officials said the TPP was not dead and they were still at the
table in Danang. They say Canada cannot be rushed into an agreement if
it isn't beneficial enough for Canadian jobs.
"If we need to keep working at other tables, so be it. Let's get it
right," said one Canadian official.
Canada's position is complicated by renegotiation of the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the Trump administration.
An agreement to push forward TPP would have been a boost for the
principle of multilateral trade deals as opposed to the Trump approach.
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Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speaks during a news conference
with U.S. President Donald Trump, not pictured, at Akasaka Palace in
Tokyo, Japan, November 6, 2017. REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Pool
BUFFETED BY TRUMP
APEC, whose leaders hold their full summit on Saturday, has itself been buffeted
by the changes under Trump.
Talks between trade and foreign ministers from the group failed to reach
agreement on their usual joint statement in the face of U.S. demands to remove
language about supporting free trade and fighting protectionism.
"I see a tremendous shift," Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said at the
summit. "I see the rise of anti-globalisation, the rise of more inward-looking
(policies), which ironically is against the whole philosophy of setting up of
APEC."
Trump set out a strong message which made clear there was no turning back -
particularly in a region which he believes is taking U.S. jobs by running trade
surpluses with the United States.
"We are not going to let the United States be taken advantage of anymore," Trump
said. "I am always going to put America first, the same way that I expect all of
you in this room to put your countries first."
He expressed a willingness to do bilateral deals in the region on the basis of
mutual respect and mutual benefit, while saying the United States had suffered
from World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules by obeying them while others did not.
"It signaled clearly a move away from the rules-based multilateral system that
the U.S. has actually done very well under," James Fatheree of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce business lobby group told Reuters. "We have done well in helping
lead the system."
President Xi made clear China's aspiration to take that leadership role in a
speech that immediately followed Trump's.
"Should we steer economic globalisation, or should we dither and stall in the
face of challenge? Should we jointly advance regional cooperation or should we
go our separate ways?" Xi asked. "Openness brings progress, while self-seclusion
leaves one behind."
(Reporting by Mai Nguyen, Matthew Tostevin, Kiyoshi Takenaka, Michael Martina,
A. Ananthalakshmi, Steve Holland; Editing by Richard Borsuk and Nick Macfie,
Larry King)
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