Trump says U.S. will only rejoin Pacific trade pact if
terms are improved
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[April 13, 2018]
By David Chance and Tetsushi Kajimoto
WASHINGTON/TOKYO (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump said the United States would only join the Trans Pacific
Partnership, a multinational trade deal his administration walked away
from last year, if it offered "substantially better" terms than those
provided under previous negotiations.
His comments, made on Twitter late Thursday, came only hours after he
had unexpectedly indicated the United States might rejoin the landmark
pact, and amid heightened volatility in financial markets as Washington
locked horns with China in a bitter trade dispute.
Trump had told Republican senators earlier in the day that he had asked
United States Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and White House
economic adviser Larry Kudlow to re-open negotiations.
In his Twitter post, which came during Asian trading hours, Trump said
the United States would "only join TPP if the deal were substantially
better than the deal offered to Pres. Obama. We already have BILATERAL
deals with six of the eleven nations in TPP, and are working to make a
deal with the biggest of those nations, Japan, who has hit us hard on
trade for years!"
Policymakers in the Asia-Pacific region on Friday responded to the
possibility of the U.S. rejoining the trade deal with scepticism.
"If it's true, I would welcome it," Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso
told reporters after a cabinet meeting on Friday and before Trump's
tweet. Aso added that the facts needed to be verified.
Trump "is a person who could change temperamentally, so he may say
something different the next day", Aso said.
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, commenting after Trump's
tweet, said it would be "great" to have the U.S. back in the pact though
doubted it would happen.
"We’re certainly not counting on it,” Turnbull told reporters in
Adelaide in South Australia.
The TPP, which now comprises 11 nations, was designed to cut trade
barriers in some of the fastest-growing economies of the Asia-Pacific
region and to counter China's rising economic and diplomatic clout.
Trump, who opposed multilateral trade pacts in his election campaign in
2016 and criticized the TPP as a "horrible deal", pulled the U.S. out of
the pact in early 2017. He argued bilateral deals offered better terms
for U.S. businesses and workers, and signaled an intention to raise
trade barriers.
But Trump is struggling to get support from other countries for his
recent threat to impose import tariffs on China and the U.S. farm lobby
is arguing that retaliation by China would hit American agricultural
exports.
Trade experts believe Trump is probably trying to placate his political
base in the wake of criticism over the U.S.-China China tariff standoff.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President Donald
Trump holds up the executive order on withdrawal from the Trans
Pacific Partnership after signing it in the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington January 23, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
"Well I think you have to take it seriously but I think there is an enormous
chance that this is simply posturing or a tactical decision taken to placate
concerned governors and senators from agricultural states that could be affected
by China imposing tariffs," said Charles Finny, a Wellington-based trade
consultant and a former New Zealand government trade negotiator.
"I think it's very important for people to realize, particularly given this most
recent tweet, if there is a negotiation it will not be an easy one. It will take
a long time and also there is huge risk around ratification."
NEW PROCESS
Even before Trump's official withdrawal last year, U.S. participation in the
pact was seen as increasingly unlikely due to opposition in the U.S. Congress.
The United States entered TPP negotiations in 2008. In 2016, then President
Barack Obama's administration abandoned attempts to push the pact through
Congress.
The other 11 countries forged ahead with their own agreement without U.S.
participation, and in the process eliminated chapters on investment, government
procurement and intellectual property that were key planks of Washington's
demands.
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, noting the progress made by the 11
countries after Trump abandoned the deal, also flagged challenges to the Untied
States rejoining the pact.
"If the United States, it turns out, do genuinely wish to rejoin, that triggers
a whole new process," she told reporters in Auckland.
"There would be another process and so, at this stage we are talking
hypotheticals."
The 11-member pact includes Mexico and Canada, which are in the process of
re-negotiating the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement with the
United States.
A Canadian government official said on Thursday there had not been any formal
outreach from the United States about the pact.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet Trump next week. Japan, a close
U.S. ally, is a member of the TPP.
(Reporting by David Chance, Patricia Zengerle and David Brunnstrom in
WASHINGTON, David Ljunggren in OTTAWA, Tetsushi Kajimoto in TOKYO and Charlotte
Greenfield in WELLINGTON, Brendan O'Brien in MILWAUKEE; Writing by Shri
Navaratnam; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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