TEHRAN (Basirat)- While the United States-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) free trade deal face mounting opposition among public and politicians, China is working out two alternatives, a report by the US intelligence company Stratfor read.
While the United States-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) free trade deal face mounting opposition among public and politicians, China is working out two alternatives, a report by the US intelligence company Stratfor read.
TPP negotiations were finalized in October and must be ratified by all 12 signatories within the next two years.
The parties to the deal are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan,
Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States and
Vietnam, and comprise approximately 40 percent of world GDP.
The Chinese initiatives will be helmed by none other but China, in a
bid to create a model for future economic cooperation in the Pacific
region.
On October 6, the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced it had completed a
study for the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP). It is a
multilateral trade deal that is expected to be presented at the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit on November 19-20.
On October 11, representatives of 16 countries began talks in
Tianjin on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP)
proposal. The RCEP is based on the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) and its existing free trade agreements with China,
India, Australia, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand.
The RCEP is described as a framework for liberalizing and harmonizing
certain standards among the participants, including not only trade
regulations but also such issues as protection of intellectual property
rights and a dispute settlement mechanism.
"Nevertheless, anecdotal evidence suggests that the RCEP, if
enacted, would focus largely on liberalizing trade in goods, indicating
it could be closer in practice to existing East Asian free trade
agreements than to the TPP, which calls for a more thorough overhaul of
regulations in industries of interest to developed economies like the
United States, including pharmaceuticals and information technology,"
the report read.
The FTAAP may look more similar to the TPP. It would include all
the 12 participants of the TPP deal, plus Russia and Taiwan and every
RCEP country except India.
"The United States even reportedly supported the FTAAP in its early
stages before shifting its attention to its own version of the deal that
cut China out of the picture," according to Stratfor.
In fact, there is a significant difference between the TTP and
FTAAP. The TPP presumes a set of stringent requirement on some issues,
including intellectual property rights. China is unlikely to accept
them.
"It [TPP] means to lay the foundation of future competition in the
Asia-Pacific, a set of rules that China, unsurprisingly, is unlikely to
accept. From the United States and Japan's point of view, the deal is a
means to try to force China to get on board with their interests or risk
isolation," the report read.
In turn, the FTAAP would conclude fewer conditions and regulations.
Instead, it will be more focused on promoting free trade in goods and
services across the region. However, such an approach has been opposed
by Washington.
According to Stratfor, unlike in the event of the TPP, if the FTAAP is
enacted it will be more profitable for China than for the US.
The participants of the TPP now have two years to ratify the deal.
In order to enact the deal, it must be ratified by the US which accounts
for over 60 percent of GDP in the free trade area.
"But with popular resistance to trade rising and the two major US
presidential candidates openly opposing the TPP, the chances of the deal
being shuttered before it even gets off the ground cannot be ignored,"
the report concluded.