What Biden should do to improve trade

What Biden should do to improve trade

Former US President Donald Trump's isolationist and protectionist "America First" policies seriously damaged America and its global leadership role. Raising tariffs on imports to the United States -- in particular, from China -- succeeded only in prompting other countries to impose reciprocal tariffs on US goods. Mr Trump's trade policy therefore ended up hurting most Americans, from farmers to middle-class consumers.

Under Mr Trump, the US withdrew from the 2015 Paris climate agreement, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, and launched a contemptuous assault on the World Trade Organization (WTO) by refusing to agree to any appointments to the WTO's Appellate Body.

President Joe Biden's administration quickly reversed many of Mr Trump's economic, environmental, and Covid-19 policies, including by returning the US to the Paris accord and reversing America's withdrawal from the WHO. But Mr Biden has been very slow to roll back his predecessor's protectionist trade measures. Nearly a year into Mr Biden's term, some of the Trump tariffs remain in place. There is no talk of America joining the TPP's successor, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). And while the Biden administration does talk about reviving the WTO, it has yet to turn rhetoric into action.

Mr Biden's inaction is puzzling. He has been clear about his policy goals regarding China, which he sees as America's most serious competitor. In December, Mr Biden invited more than 100 world leaders to a virtual Summit for Democracy to discuss the challenges posed by authoritarian states, principally China and Russia. Given this, why isn't his administration rushing to join the CPTPP?

The original TPP was signed in 2016 by 12 Pacific Rim countries, including the US during Barack Obama's presidency, and notably excluded China. It was conceived as a regional economic alliance intended to promote comprehensive free trade and investment, protect intellectual-property rights, regulate digital commerce, and prevent signatories from gaining an unfair competitive advantage through the actions of their state-owned enterprises (SOEs). The pact was a thinly disguised attempt by major Pacific economies, with the exception of South Korea, to compete more effectively against China. And its successor agreement, the CPTPP, has become increasingly influential in the Asia-Pacific region, despite America's refusal thus far to join.

It is not difficult to see why. The Chinese authorities often require foreign firms making direct investments in China to form a joint venture with a local partner. And rapid Chinese export growth was made possible by state-owned banks financing SOEs, prompting other countries to complain of excessive subsidisation.

After Mr Trump withdrew the US from the TPP in January 2017, Japan's then-prime minister, Shinzo Abe, took the lead in forging the CPTPP, or TPP11, among the pact's remaining members. Some of the clauses for which the US had pushed during the original TPP negotiations were shelved. The TPP11 is functioning well, but misses America's presence.

Moreover, while the US wasted the last five years by turning away, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) signed the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

The RCEP, which took effect on Jan 1, trades US$2.5 trillion among its members, or about 13% of global trade in goods, and its 15 signatories account for 30% of global GDP. It is the first FTA between Japan and China. But in order to accommodate emerging-market Asean economies, average tariffs under the RCEP will remain higher than in the TPP11 agreement, and coverage of investment is narrower.

The second development is that China and Taiwan applied separately to join the TPP11 in September 2021, presenting the Japanese government with huge challenges.

For starters, can the existing TPP11 members negotiate with China to maintain the agreement's high bar for entry, or could they end up being divided over how tough a line to take?

Furthermore, the TPP11 countries may feel that welcoming Taiwan would provide additional economic-security benefits. That might invite harsh reactions from China.

Given the uncertainty about Japan's readiness to play a tough political and economic game with China and Taiwan over the TPP11, strong US leadership is needed now more than ever. Mr Biden should make America's rapid accession to the agreement an urgent priority. ©2022 Project Syndicate


Takatoshi Ito, a former Japanese deputy vice minister of finance, is a professor at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University and a senior professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo.

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