Thursday, March 19, 2015

Japan says difficult to reach Japan-US trade deal without TPA

Japan says difficult to reach Japan-US trade deal without TPA

[TOKYO] Japanese Economy Minister Akira Amari said on Friday it would be difficult to reach an agreement in two-way trade talks between Japan and the United States unless US lawmakers fast-tracked trade promotion legislation.
The two countries have been working toward an agreement over access to agriculture and auto markets and a bilateral deal between them is considered key to a 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal.
A delay in agreeing on the legislation in the United States to streamline the passage of trade deals, known as trade promotion authority (TPA), through Congress is blamed for pushing back the timetable on the TPP. "Not only Japan but also other member nations share a view that TPA is an essential condition for the TPP agreement. I would like President Obama to make the utmost effort," Mr Amari told a news conference. "It is very high hurdle to reach an agreement to Japan-the US trade talks unless we see clarity on the prospect for TPA bill." Amari said this week that he wanted to reach a broad agreement on the two-way trade talks before Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's expected visit to the United States from late April to early May.
A source familiar with Japan's stance on TPP told Reuters he did not know if the two allies could clinch an agreement before Abe's visit, primarily because of a lack of clarity on the outlook for TPA. "I know there are issues pending and I know the solutions are not easy," he said. "It's certainly doable but I don't know if the US is prepared." Another source said talks on the TPP were unlikely to gather momentum if prospects for the passage of TPA remained unclear.
"It will certainly be good if we can reach an agreement when leaders from the two nations are to meet," he said. "But is there any definite reason that we have to reach an agreement in a situation where both the prospect for TPA bill and TPP talks are uncertain?" New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser told Reuters in an interview this week that passing legislation to grant TPA was"crucial" and certain countries would not close the deal with out it.
REUTERS

China says would welcome US role in infrastructure bank

China says would welcome US role in infrastructure bank

[BERLIN] Chinese deputy finance minister Shi Yaobin has told the German press his country would welcome a US role in a Beijing-backed multinational lender, hours after state media described Washington as "petulant and cynical".
"We would welcome the United States into the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)," Shi told Handelsblatt daily in an interview set for publication Thursday.
The United States perceives the AIIB, a US$50 billion institution, as a threat to the Washington-led World Bank.
"The new bank will mainly play a supporting role for other international institutions," Shi said, according to an extract published Wednesday.
"For the AIIB, we want to learn about how these institutions work, and if possible, we'll be able to copy their good example," the official said.
"That goes for environmental standards, governance rules and some good purchasing practices," he added.
The remarks come after France, Germany and Italy announced their decision on Tuesday to become founding members in the AIIB.
Earlier Wednesday, Chinese state media gloated over the major European powers' decision to join the bank, while describing the US as "petulant and cynical".
Paris, Rome and Berlin's decision came after London last week announced its own ambitions to join, drawing a rare rebuke from Washington.
China touts the institution as a tool for financing regional development alongside other lenders such as the World Bank and the Japan-led, Manila-based Asian Development Bank.
AFP

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