This Week in Asia

Explained: the CPTPP trade deal

The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) was an ambitious trade agreement involving 12 countries that encompassed 40 per cent of the world's economy and over 800 million consumers. The member countries were Japan, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the US, Mexico, Peru and Chile.

The deal was signed in 2016 but it was never ratified by the US Congress. The pact became a target of criticism from both right-wing and left-wing pundits and US President Donald Trump withdrew from it on his first day in office, in January 2017.

However, the rest of member states of the TPP agreed to stick to a revised version of the deal, known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

The deal was also seen as a tool by the US to contain China's growing economic clout in the Asia-Pacific region. It was characterised as a key element of former US president Barack Obama's 'Pivot to Asia', a strategy that sought to strengthen alliances in Asia and signal US commitment to the region.

It was criticised, though, on the grounds it would lower wages and transfer more manufacturing jobs from developed to developing countries. Trump tapped into these anxieties while campaigning for the presidency, while vowing to put "America first".

Furthermore, trade unions and left-wing politicians argued the deal granted too much power to corporations and feared provisions on labour and environmental standards would not be upheld in some of the participant countries.

US President Donald Trump withdrawing the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Photo: Handout

Before Trump withdrew from the TPP, negotiations were hampered by several political hurdles.

In order to accommodate other members' petitions, Japan agreed to reduced barriers to its auto market for foreign companies, and accelerated the demise of the country's powerful farming lobby, which opposed reducing tariffs on agricultural products.

Similarly, Brunei, Vietnam, Malaysia and Vietnam agreed to reforms to their labour laws.

The US also ended up ceding ground on the strict patents for pharmaceuticals, while Canada agreed to partially open up its dairy market.

It was, overall, a complicated balancing act among 12 very different economies.

Once the US withdrew, the rest of signatories signed onto the CPTPP in March 2018.

Although most of the deal was preserved, the signatories removed some of the clauses proposed by Washington, including stronger protections for intellectual property.

The CPTPP covers more than 13 per cent of world GDP, or a total of US$10 trillion dollars. All member countries are expected to receive a boost to their economies from lower tariffs and increased market access.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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