注册 登录
滑铁卢中文论坛 返回首页

风萧萧的个人空间 http://waterloobbs.ca/bbs/?61910 [收藏] [复制] [分享] [RSS]

日志

Forget the TTIP row, now the American TTP trade deal looks set for collapse

已有 272 次阅读2016-8-28 10:45 |个人分类:加拿大| believes, passing, trade, Trump



Forget the TTIP row, now the American TTP trade deal looks set for collapse

Obama believes passing TTP would be a major win for his administration as he seeks to define his presidential legacy – but both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump oppose the deal


http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/ttip-american-ttp-trade-deal-bernie-sanders-hillary-clinton-donald-trump-barack-obama-looks-set-for-a7194336.html


Just like the debate over TTIP at home, in the US another controversial trade deal is causing political ructions, and will play an important role in deciding the tough decisions that will face the next American president come January.

Senator Bernie Sanders last weekend called for the Democratic Party to abandon efforts to pass the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal in Congress. His move followed a set-piece economic speech by Hillary Clinton last Thursday in which she re-emphasised her own opposition to TPP, underlining growing concerns across the world over the prospect that – after seven decades of Washington being at the forefront of efforts to liberalise the international economy – a political backlash is killing off support for free trade.

In the face of these troubles, the Obama administration will continue its August blitz this week to boost support within the United States for the 12 country TPP deal. 

At least 30 events are planned before the end of the month in a major effort to build popular and congressional assent for the landmark trade and investment deal – the biggest regional free trade agreement in history, and the largest trade deal struck since the 1994 completion of the Uruguay Round, which created the World Trade Organisation. 

0:00
/
0:00
 







                                      
                                        Obama pushes US Congress for TTP sign-off

A reason for the big push, which moves in September to Capitol Hill, is the potential hammer blow to US prestige and leadership if TPP fails, together with the prospect that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership deal (TTIP) with Europe could follow the same path. 

Aside from the opposition to TPP of both Democratic and Republican presidential nominees, US House Speaker Paul Ryan – who is a TPP advocate – admitted last week that “we don’t have the votes” in Congress for the bill to be brought up before the end of Obama’s presidency, even in the “lame duck” session after November’s elections.

TPP is strategically important for the US administration, and not just because the 12 countries – Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam  and the US – encompass around 40 per cent of world GDP. It also has important trade rules-setting functions: Obama has asserted that the TTP treaty would enable Washington, rather than Beijing, to create the foundation stone for “21st century trade rules”, including trading standards, investment, data flows and intellectual property. 

As Obama has noted, “when more than 95 per cent of our potential customers live outside our borders, we can’t let countries like China write the rules of the global economy. We should write those rules, opening new markets to American products while setting high standards for protecting workers and preserving our environment”.

The precise economic impact of the proposed deal is hard to forecast with precision. However, the Peterson Institute for International Economics has indicated that it will provide an approximately $300bn (£230bn) boost to the TPP countries (which might expand, over time, to include other countries such as China) by 2025.

Yet TPP is a very controversial agreement, with many domestic lobby groups opposing it – including labour organisations in the US itself, which are concerned about the impact upon wages and jobs for blue-collar workers in the country of the free trade deal. Congressional lawmakers, including the Republican chair of the Senate finance committee Orrin Hatch, have also expressed concerns about the nature of TPP deal, which would phase out a swathe of import tariffs and other barriers to trade.

While much of the congressional discontent with TPP centres on the economic impact of TPP, it is being promoted by Obama as an opportunity for the US to become even more influential in the strategically-important Asia-Pacific region.

The treaty will set more trade rules than any other previous example, including limiting subsidies to state-owned companies which could become very important were China eventually to join the agreement. It would also help lock-in US international policy toward the Asia-Pacific region and other strategic high-growth markets.

So Obama believes passing TTP would be a major win for his administration as he seeks to define his presidential legacy with less than six months left before his tenure in the White House comes to an end.

The White House recognises that passage of TPP will serve the goal of reassuring Asia-Pacific allies about the US’s enduring security and political commitments to them. And, in turn, the new free trade agreement will send a clear message to others – especially China – about US intent to continue to place greater strategic emphasis on the region, despite its involvement in other regions of the world including the Middle East.

Uncertainty over the fate of the TPP treaty is growing. A breakthrough remains possible that will help Obama define his White House legacy and also shape the contours of the 21st century world economy. But the prospects are increasing of the deal failing to secure congressional ratification, which will damage US prestige and leadership in Asia-Pacific and will have wider ramifications for trade and foreign policy for the next presidency.

Andrew Hammond is an associate at LSE IDEAS, the Centre for International Affairs, Diplomacy and Strategy at the London School of Economics



32 Comments

10 days ago
Joe2233
Clinton doesn't oppose anything
She just wants the name changed now that people know what it is
11 days ago
hipster
US is the only winner with TTIP.

10 days ago
Joe2233
No the US does not benefit, only multinational globalists do
11 days ago
burton schrader
Key element is the investor-state dispute settlement.  This procedure would allow companies to sue foreign governments over claims of unfair treatment and to be entitled to compensation.  Attempts were made to sue Canada by an American company because they did not go ahead with a hoped for oil pipeline.  For example.  Great news if TTIP fails to go through.
11 days ago
PlantPhotonics
HANG ON A MOMENT... Brexit told us arranging and implementing trade deals was really easy, could be done with dozens of countries in a 2 year period, and would be fantastic for us. And easy. Or at least possible. We are, after all, the 5th largest economy.

So, erm, how come the top economy can't manage it?
11 days ago
Karl
Because it's a rubbish deal except for the USA
So no one wants to sign up
11 days ago
hir0
Now he's nearly retired to the golf course for good he's finally uncloaking. For someone who was called a socialist and a communist, he certainly doesn't mind supporting multi-nationals over the American people. No more denying, he's a globalist and a puppet for the banks, corporations and insurance companies. 
11 days ago
PlantPhotonics
He was called a communist by neo-Nazi fascists and by nobody else.
11 days ago
hir0
He was called a communist and socialist because of his own views and connections to known communist sympathisers, like Frank Marshall Davis and Bill Ayers.
11 days ago
Philip
Obama cannot be trusted. During his election campaign he promised to change NAFTA - yet once president he did not do anything in this respect. He acts in the interest of huge corporations and Wall Street and this is the reason why he pushes TTIP and any other trade agreement.
11 days ago
jegog
If it was such a good deal the terms would be made public and the impetus coming from the informed population would drive it's adaption. But the terms have been agreed to in secrecy and only after adoption will the agreement terms be made public. Trust me, not on your life.
11 days ago
Niamh Mary
The text of the TPP was made available after it was signed in NZ .  Is likely to be very similar to TTIP in intent and content.  There was huge opposition, especially to ISDS; completely ignored by govt.
Hoping Congress will not pass it.  Link below.


https://www.tpp.mfat.govt.nz/text
11 days ago
Longfellow
The world is waking up to the crooked deals from State Side. Never trust the Yanks NEVER.
11 days ago
49niner
This is simply not a good time to do trade deals. Liam Fox please note.
12 days ago
spalpeenuillean
He was just a nobody really, an empty windbag. He promised to close Guantanamo within a year and he still hasn't done it after almost eight. That tells you how much power he really has.
11 days ago
Jonathan Park
It tells you how dysfunctional American politics is. As a result of Republican obstructionism over the past 8 years (and the not-so-insignificant fact they elected a vain TV pundit to represent them), they are facing a hiding in the forthcoming Presidential election, after which Hillary Clinton is likely to have the majorities in both houses necessary to pass laws. It's just a shame she is as much a regressive war hawk as many Republicans, and far less likely to want to dispose of the offensive Guantanamo prison.
12 days ago
retarius
Please, please, pretty please….make this horror show of TTIP go away, buried somewhere in a cess pit where it belongs.
12 days ago
Dominic Hagan
he thinks he can do a clinton when clintons nafta has ruined the economy and cost tens of millions of jobs. tpp and ttip will do the same despite claims that it will take jobs from europe. it will but they will not go stateside.

free trade is a fallacy just like the alledged benefits of a single EU market which has cost the UK many industries, factories and jobs as the likes of british sugar, cadburys, terrys etc are hollowed out and sent to poland 
12 days ago
QUOI
'Free' trade, indeed - free for whom? The Multicorpse, the Banksters and their un-taxed global trillionaire 'investor' vultures, that's who.

All one has to do is look at the economic mess created in Central America by NAFTA, where many thousands of small businesses have been wiped out, wages have fallen (fueling social/political strife and migration) - and where American reject products (including cars with faulty alarms, maddeningly) have flooded in. 

Oh, I was forgetting the good news - obesity rates are soaring, as the result of transfat and additives to the Multicorpse fatfood increasingly eaten by children across the region. Now there's progress. 

That is all this is about, aside from US corporations being able to sue sovereign states for lost [hypothetical] profits.

Too bad about POTUS's "legacy"!

Q
11 days ago
hir0
It's not even about free trade. That is nothing compared to what they are really after. The ability to sue governments that impact on their profits. Influence policy overseas. It's the beginnings of fascist global governance. 
12 days ago
tony smyth
'potential hammer blow to US prestige and leadership if TPP fails' - Nonsense. Its a temporary blow to huge corporations who would have the ability to override national law and any semblance of democracy in their eternal search for greater shareholder profit and grotesque CEO payouts. 
This comment has been deleted
12 days ago
QUOI
Mate, there's something terribly wrong with your shift and/or caps lock keys!

Q
This comment has been deleted
12 days ago
Stig
No-one, no-one at all, will read something in all capitals that's more than 3 words long.
12 days ago
wiseowler
Great- the sooner we get to end the rip off of the world's economy for the benefit of the 0.1% and global capital the better. Let's hope that the IMF, World Bank and the WTO go the same way soon
12 days ago
QUOI
Ditto here - but you forgot the UN and NATO, those other welfare 'job' programmes for well-connected boyz 'n girls paid for entirely by western taxpayers.

Q
12 days ago
Bryt26
A typo in the headline. It's TPP not TTP Indy and again later.
12 days ago
mowgli66
ISDS alone makes TPP, TTIP and TISA bad deals.
12 days ago
QUOI
Way too much ink in those acronyms!

Q
12 days ago
mowgli66
All those deals are sellouts of democracy to corporate interests.
12 days ago
QUOI
Indeed, that's what the ink is intended to blot out.

Q
12 days ago
Mujokan
Congress can simply be bought. Ratification requires six countries representing 85 percent of combined GDP to approve it: there is some room there.
12 days ago
QUOI
Voters/taxpayers will LOVE that - and signs are that they're finally noticing these little things, and how much they're costing them (as their standard of living plummets).

路过

雷人

握手

鲜花

鸡蛋

评论 (0 个评论)

facelist

您需要登录后才可以评论 登录 | 注册

法律申明|用户条约|隐私声明|小黑屋|手机版|联系我们|www.kwcg.ca

GMT-5, 2025-10-8 01:21 , Processed in 0.041628 second(s), 17 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

© 2001-2021 Comsenz Inc.  

返回顶部