As US votes,
Europe and Asia ponder fate of trade deals
Stalled efforts by the U.S. and European Union to
forge a trans-Atlantic trade pact will remain on ice for the foreseeable future
-- regardless of the outcome of the Nov. 8 U.S. presidential election,
according to the EU's agriculture commissioner. Failure to finalize the
proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership pact reflects growing
protectionist sentiment in both the U.S. and Europe, and mirrors problems
besetting its U.S.-Asian counterpart, the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement.
Negotiations on the TTIP will not resume until the new U.S.
administration -- led by Democrat Hillary Clinton or her Republican rival
Donald Trump -- settles into office, said Phil Hogan, the European Commissioner
for Agriculture and Rural Development.
"These are on hold at the moment until we know what the new policy
position of the U.S. will be," Hogan said on Tuesday in Jakarta, on the
final leg of an EU trade mission to Asia. "We have had a lot of political
rhetoric from both candidates, probably to a greater extent from Mr. Trump who
has expressed himself as anti-trade, Mrs. Clinton has said less than positive
things about trade as well."
Trump has expressed strong opposition to free trade agreements -- despite
his background as a businessman -- while Clinton has been forced to reverse her
support for deals such as the TPP due to an increasingly vocal protectionist
faction in her own Democratic Party. Other more liberal Democrats fear
the failure of both the TPP and the TTIP trade deals will
undermine American prestige in the world's most economically dynamic
region.
Much has been made in Asia of opposition by both U.S. presidential
contenders to the U.S.-led TPP, which was agreed in 2015. Among the 12
countries to sign the pact were Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam, but the
agreement has not been ratified in the U.S., where a majority of elected
representatives appear hostile to the deal.
American backtracking on the TPP comes as U.S. allies such as
the Philippines and Thailand are drifting toward China, the world's second
biggest economy after the U.S.
The 28-member European Union, which collectively amounts to a bigger
economy than either China or the U.S., accepts that the TTIP is in
abeyance for now. U.S.-EU tensions over the stalled negotiations have simmered,
with Germany's vice chancellor declaring the deal dead in late August
after several rounds of fruitless negotiations. Earlier in 2016, Hogan and
other top EU officials said they wanted to renegotiate some provisions of
the TTIP, dealing a blow to Obama's hopes of finalizing an agreement
before he leaves office in early 2017.
Hogan's farming portfolio takes up 38% of the EU budget, around $60
billion per year, and opposition to the TTIP is strong among some European
farming lobbies, particularly in France, where in 2015 farmers staged protests
against falling prices for agricultural products, and criticized Hogan's
leadership of EU agricultural policy.
Further tensions
The U.S. election is not the only potential roadblock to future
trade progress in Asia and Europe. The U.S. was also angered
by EU tax demands on American multinationals, particularly a ruling
earlier in 2016 that U.S. tech giant Apple owed $13 billion in unpaid
taxes on the back of what the EU regarded as illegal state aid provided by
member state Ireland. The U.S. in turn has raised the ire of Europeans by
imposing huge fines on European banks operating stateside.
In late June, the U.K. voted in a referendum to leave the EU -- a move
that has triggered bitter debate. "The United Kingdom are net
contributors financially, to the tune of 10 [or] 11 billion [euros], to the
European Union budget, so it is going to have an impact on all
programs," Hogan told the Nikkei Asian Review, noting how Brexit will
affect EU spending in areas such as agriculture.
Hogan added that it is impossible to assess the wider impact of
the U.K.'s departure, unless the government reveals its exit plans. A high
court in Britain ruled in early November that the U.K. parliament alone can
notify Brussels of the country's decision to leave the EU, which would then
trigger negotiations for departure. The British government, led by Prime
Minister Theresa May, had hoped that it could trigger the departure mechanism without
parliamentary approval.
"The truth is no-one knows what the British government has in
mind," Hogan said. "In the event that we know what the
principles are around those negotiations [on UK withdrawal from the
EU] then we can better answer."
What Britain's departure from the EU does mean, Hogan added, is
that "trade negotiations cannot start until such time as
the exit negotiations are concluded."
EU looks eastward
In the meantime, the EU is hoping to drum up more commercial
opportunities in Asia for European businesses, after a free trade deal between
the EU and Canada almost collapsed recently when objections were raised by
the French-speaking Belgian region of Wallonia.
Before visiting Indonesia to discuss a bilateral economic
partnership agreement -- something the EU hopes will lead to full free
trade deal -- Hogan and a group of 42 European business leaders visited Vietnam
and Hong Kong.
The EU opened negotiations for a region-to-region free trade deal with
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in in 2007, but those talks
were put on ice in 2009 as the EU sought bilateral deals with some of the 10
ASEAN member states instead.
The EU is the largest source of foreign investment into ASEAN -- 22% of
the region's total in 2014 -- and is the group's second biggest trade partner
after China.
After signing a free trade agreement with Vietnam in 2015, Brussels
conducted much more business with the country than with Indonesia, which is
substantially larger.
The EU also has a free trade deal with Singapore, by far the region's
wealthiest country, and, while total EU investment fluctuates year by year,
Singapore is the main destination for European investment in Southeast Asia.
"They see the business to business contacts are very valuable in
Singapore," Hogan said, discussing why European companies focus their
Southeast Asian operations on the tiny city-state.
But Indonesia, which accounts for about 40% of the total 620
million population of Southeast Asia, has huge potential, said Hogan,
praising some of the pro-business reforms enacted by the Indonesian government.
"European companies already provide 1 million jobs here in
Indonesia and we hope it can grow," he said. "There is an expectation
that 30% to 35% of the population will be middle class here by 2030."
Even so, there are hurdles for Europeans wanting to export agricultural
products to Indonesia's growing consumer market, he added.
"They have to give us a level playing pitch to do so," Hogan
said, citing as an example the lack of port access in Jakarta for some EU
agricultural products -- a barrier not applied to imports from Australia
or the U.S.
SIMON ROUGHNEEN, Asia regional correspondent
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