WASHINGTON: A standoff between the United States and Japan is holding up talks on a sweeping Pacific free trade pact and a lack of authority to push an eventual deal through the US Congress without amendment may be undercutting Washington’s hand.
After weekend talks in Singapore, including two separate sessions between Japan and the United States, Japanese Economics Minister Akira Amari said “considerable gaps” remained with the United States on bread-and-butter issues like farm tariffs.
Other officials at the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks, which aim to create a free trade zone spanning 12 countries and nearly 40 percent of the global economy, noted the impasse between the two biggest economies in the bloc.
“What happens between Japan and the US is pretty key because they are the big players,” Australian Trade Minister Andrew Robb told CNBC television, estimating that countries were about 80 percent done on market access issues, which include the tariffs and quotas causing much of the US-Japan tension.
There is talk in trade circles that Japan might leave the talks if it will not drop barriers to imports of farm products such as beef and rice. But the Asian power’s entry to the TPP last year was a game changer for many participants given its high-income population and relatively low import penetration.
“Many tried and failed in the past to negotiate a bilateral deal with Japan, so in a sense they are riding the coattails of the United States to get into the Japanese market,” said Peterson Institute for International Economics trade analyst Jeffrey Schott.
For his part, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe needs the trade pact to drive through reforms to kick-start stagnant growth, including deregulation and increased competition. A Peterson study showed the TPP would boost Japan’s economy by 2.2 percent by 2025.
US Trade Representative Michael Froman stressed that Canada was also a sticking point in Singapore, but the toughest issue is Japan, which is keen to protect politically powerful farmers and which levies average agriculture tariffs of 16.6 percent.
While Japan is the United States’ fourth-biggest trading partner with goods and services flows worth about $280 billion a year, it accounts for only 8 percent of US agricultural exports and 7 percent of services exports.
Trade experts say Japan, although aligned with US interests on new trade issues like intellectual property and investment protections, will not put up its best offers until the White House secures fast-track negotiating power from Congress.
So-called trade promotion authority (TPA) would bar the US Congress from amending trade deals; instead, it would have to simply give the thumbs-up or down.
“Without TPA, I think the level of ambition will be put in question,” Luis de la Calle, who helped negotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) for Mexico, said at an event sponsored by the Brookings Institution and the Economic Club of Minnesota.
“Why would Japan put something on the table that might be reversed by the US Congress?”
The problem for the US administration is that fast-track power is bogged down by domestic political sensitivities ahead of midterm elections in November.
President Barack Obama said last week that he told his Mexican and Canadian counterparts, also TPP partners, that fast-track power would flow from a good TPP. “We’ll get this passed if it’s a good agreement,” he said at a joint news conference in Mexico.
While some trading partners, like Australia, have played down the lack of TPA, others with problems selling the TPP at home – like Japan and Malaysia – would like Obama to make a bigger push to win over Congress, especially trade skeptics within his own party worried about the impact on US jobs.
Democrats cannot afford to spurn big business, the farm lobby or unions – an important support base – before the elections. This complicates the time frame for passing TPA, particularly with Obama planning a trip to Asia in April that might allow some top-level trade lobbying.
“The other side is not going to give the hardest, most sensitive markets up for nothing,” said Michael Green, Japan chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington and an Asia policy official under President George W. Bush.
“They would never have done it for (President Bill) Clinton and Bush … without the US president first making the case loud and actively for authority to pass the agreement when they are done.”
But it will take a lot to convince critics. Although Republicans, who generally support free trade, have the numbers in the House, Democrats control the upper chamber, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has warned the administration to go slow on TPA.
A TPA bill introduced in Congress last month is on hold while the new head of the Senate Finance Committee, Ron Wyden, consults with colleagues about its future.
The top Democrat on the House committee responsible for trade, Sander Levin, has put plans for an alternative TPA bill with tougher protection for workers on the back burner for now.
“Addressing the issues and concerns of the people of this country on TPP is the No. 1 item on the agenda now for trade,” he said at the release of a study showing how many US jobs could be created by stopping foreign countries from manipulating currencies.
Levin’s home state of Michigan is home to big US automakers fearful of competition from Japanese imports and resentful of what they see as Japan’s barriers to US cars, another issue in bilateral talks running parallel to the TPP.
Levin’s colleague Louise Slaughter has written a bill that would allow the United States to take tit-for-tat action against trading partners’ trade barriers. She is one of 151 House Democrats who wrote to Obama in November opposing TPA.
“The news we got from Singapore was just the latest evidence, I think, that our opposition to fast-track authority is complicating those negotiations, and that’s great news for our economy,” she said this week.
According to independent monitor Global Trade Alert, Japan is the TPP country that has introduced the most measures harmful to trade since the start of the financial crisis. The United States is second.
The other countries participating in the talks are New Zealand, Singapore, Brunei, Vietnam, Chile and Peru. –Reuters
Invoke Article 33 of the ILO constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar
to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations
against serious violations of Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.
#WearMask #WashHands
#Distancing
#TakePicturesVideos