Final version of Trans-Pacific trade deal released,
rules pushed by U.S. on ice
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[February 21, 2018]
By Charlotte Greenfield and Colin Packham
WELLINGTON/SYDNEY (Reuters) - The final
version of a landmark deal aimed at cutting trade barriers in some of
the Asia-Pacific's fastest-growing economies was released on Wednesday,
signaling the pact was a step closer to reality even without its star
member the United States.
More than 20 provisions have been suspended or changed in the final text
ahead of the deal's official signing in March, including rules around
intellectual property originally included at the behest of Washington.
The original 12-member deal was thrown into limbo early last year when
U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew from the agreement to prioritize
protecting U.S. jobs.
The 11 remaining nations, led by Japan, finalized a revised trade pact
in January, called the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for
Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). It is expected to be signed in Chile
on March 8.
The deal will reduce tariffs in economies that together amount to more
than 13 percent of the global GDP - a total of $10 trillion. With the
U.S., it would have represented 40 percent.
"The big changes with TPP 11 are the suspension of a whole lot of the
provisions of the agreement. They have suspended many of the
controversial ones, particularly around pharmaceuticals," said Kimberlee
Weatherall, professor of law at the University of Sydney.
Many of these changes had been inserted into the original TPP 12 at the
demand of U.S. negotiators, such as rules ramping up intellectual
property protection of pharmaceuticals, which some governments and
activists worried would raise the costs of medicine.
The success of the deal has been touted by officials in Japan and other member
countries as an antidote to counter growing U.S. protectionism, and with the
hope that Washington would eventually sign back up.
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New Zealand’s
Minister for Trade and Export Growth David Parker speaks to
reporters during a news conference regarding the revised text for
the recently agreed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in Wellington,
New Zealand, February 21, 2018. REUTERS/Charlotte Greenfield
"CPTPP has become more important because of the growing threats to the effective
operation of the World Trade Organisation rules," New Zealand Trade Minister
David Parker said on Wednesday.
Last month, Trump told the World Economic Forum in Switzerland that it was
possible Washington might return to the pact if it got a better deal.
However, Parker said on Wednesday that the prospect of the U.S. joining in the
next couple of years was "very unlikely" and that even if Washington expressed a
willingness to join CPTPP, there was no guarantee that the members would lift
all the suspensions.
Parker said the deal would likely come into force at the end of 2018 or the
first half of 2019.
Governments were quick to tout the economic benefits of the agreement.
"The TPP-11 will help create new Australian jobs across all sectors -
agriculture, manufacturing, mining, services - as it creates new opportunities
in a free trade area that spans the Americas and Asia," said Steven Ciobo,
Australia's minister for trade in an emailed statement.
New Zealand's government expected the CPTPP to boost the island nation's economy
by between NZ$1.2 billion ($881.40 million) to NZ$4 billion a year, with beef
and kiwifruit exporters among the top beneficiaries of the deal.
The 11 member countries are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia,
Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.
(Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield in WELLINGTON and Colin Packham in SYDNEY;
Editing by Kim Coghill)
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