Two strategic agreements currently being negotiated by the world’s
trading giants will likely determine the global balance of economic
power for years to come:
- Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and
- Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).
The TPP and RCEP are
not radically different instruments — they are both Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) designed to lower tariff and non-tariff barriers to
trade between countries that conduct the bulk of Global Commerce.
The TPP negotiations are led by the U.S. and involve 11 other nations
that share a Pacific Ocean coastline. Seven of those countries —
Australia, Brunei, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Vietnam —
are also party to RCEP negotiations.
TPP seeks to frame a new agenda for global trade, requiring countries to
commit beyond their existing multilateral obligations under the WTO as
well as the agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS). TPP negotiations broke down earlier this month, after
countries were unable to find common ground over IPR protections the
U.S. sought to introduce, especially in cyberspace.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership has become the centrepiece of U.S.’s Asia
policy, with the Barack Obama-led administration investing considerable
political and diplomatic capital in it.
RCEP comprises the ASEAN nations
and six others: India, China, Japan, Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
In contrast, RCEP negotiations have seen progress, albeit haltingly. The
Press Trust of India reported last week that ministerial delegations
from RCEP member countries will meet in Malaysia in August to “finalise
modalities”. RCEP is an important agreement for India, as it involves
many, if not all, of the country’s major trading partners
RCEP is not a China-led process, but involves Beijing as a key player.
China is acutely conscious of RCEP’s political significance — earlier
this year, Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng suggested China will “continue
to unswervingly push forward and quicken the pace of China’s free-trade
agreement strategy”. If such a comprehensive regional agreement were to
be inked ahead of the TPP regime, it would be a shot in the arm for
China.
In addition to trade in goods and services, both agreements cover the
critical area of intellectual property rights. RCEP is the more modest
of the two, seeking to implement and build on World Trade Organization
(WTO) commitments incrementally.
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