In
a speech at the National Press Club, Tai will explain how
decades of trade policies focused on efficiency and low costs
led to fragile supply chains and an "unsustainable version of
globalization", according to excerpts released by her office.
The excerpts show Tai offering a spirited defense of the Biden
administration's decision to eschew traditional trade
agreements, arguing that such deals contributed to the
vulnerability of supply chains exposed during the COVID-19
pandemic, and a major shift was needed.
Focusing on efficiency and low cost meant those agreements had
allowed free riders - other countries who had not signed up to
labor, environmental and other obligations - to produce
significant content and benefit from those rules.
Instead, U.S. officials were focused on a more sustainable
approach that prioritizes the needs of workers and producers and
sees standards improve over time, said Tai, who has faced
criticism for not pursuing traditional trade agreements.
"Resilient supply chains are vital for greater national and
economic security," she said in the excerpts, citing a need for
production which can adapt to crises more easily because it has
more options in different regions.
"But getting there requires a fundamental shift. A shift in the
way we incentivize decisions about what, where, and how we
produce goods and supply services."
Building resilient supply chains is a key goal in the
administration's Indo-Pacific Economic Framework discussions,
Tai said, referring to work underway by 14 countries in the
U.S.-led initiative, which is aimed in part at providing
countries in Asia an alternative to closer ties with China.
U.S. officials are aiming for more results by the time of the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders summit in San
Francisco in November.
"A lot of what we are trying to do is orient the rules toward
working people, the environment, and small businesses," she
said, drawing a sharp contrast to the "traditional priority"
long placed on promoting the interest of the 'bigs.'
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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