Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

  • Written by Patricia Ranald, Honorary research fellow, University of Sydney

The giant Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership between Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and the ten members of ASEAN (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, The Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam) was signed online on Sunday, November 15.

India left negotiations in November 2019, but even so, the deal will cover one third of the world’s population and economy.

Australia and the other governments refused to release the text until after signing, continuing Australia’s regrettable secrecy about deals it is about to sign.

India left the RCEP because of concerns about its potentially negative impact on local industry development.

Since Australia already has free trade agreements with all of the remaining members, India’s absence significantly diminishes what might have been in it for Australian exporters.

What’s left are some agreements on common standards and the claimed ability for Australia to talk to China more than it can through its own one-on-one trade agreement.

Read more: Suddenly, the world's biggest trade agreement won't allow corporations to sue governments

The text was completed before the pandemic and has not been revised since.

As it happened, Australia took actions during the pandemic that were technically contrary to the rules embodied in the RCEP in order to boost local manufacturing capacity for essential products.

We’ve already bent the rules

The prime minister has since announced longer term local industry support and the trade minister has said that the challenge for the future is about getting “the balance right”.

But the rules signed up to on Sunday will integrate Australia further into regional production chains and commit Australia to avoid assistance for local industries of the kind that will arguably be needed to rebuild and strengthen the economy.

Other rules signed up to on Sunday open essential services such as health, education, water, energy, telecommunications, finance and digital trade to foreign investors and restrict the ability of governments to regulate them in the public interest.

We've just signed the world's biggest trade deal, but what exactly is the RCEP? Sunday’s virtual signing ceremony. Lukas Coch/AAP

It remains to be seen whether these rules will give governments the flexibility they will need to get “the balance right”

Oddly for an agreement dealing with standards, there’s nothing in it about forced labour or child labour, and no mention of climate change.

Its members include countries like China and Myanmar in which there is mounting evidence of labour rights and human rights abuses.

But there are also welcome omissions.

No further rights for foreign investors

The final text confers no special rights on foreign corporations to sue governments through what are known as Investor-State Dispute Settlement clauses common in other agreements, although there is an opportunity for the members to revisit the idea two years after ratification

Nor are there increases in patent monopolies for medicines of the kind included in the original Trans-Pacific Partnership. These were suspended in the revised Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership now ratified by Australia and six other countries.

Read more: Suddenly, the world's biggest trade agreement won't allow corporations to sue governments

The RCEP will be reviewed by a parliamentary committee which, as is usual in these agreements, will be unable to change the text.

The Coalition has a majority on that committee.

Broader manoeuvring

Some commentators see the RCEP through the lens of US-China competition..

Looked at this way, the US has been weakened by the Trump administration’s decision to pull out of the original Trans Pacific Partnership.

It is argued that the RCEP is China’s creation, and the incoming Biden administration will need to counter it by re-joining the revised Trans-Pacific Partnership, which excludes China.

But this is a US-centric a view that downplays the leading role of the ASEAN countries in creating the RCEP.

Read more: What a Biden presidency means for world trade and allies like Australia

A Biden administration is unlikely to re-join the Trans Pacific Partnership any time soon. Parts of the Democratic party remain strongly opposed to it.

The US will rejoin genuinely multilateral organisations such as the World Health Organisation and the Paris Climate Agreement.

But Biden’s trade policy is likely to focus on domestic priorities such as the pandemic and climate change, about which the RCEP says nothing.

Authors: Patricia Ranald, Honorary research fellow, University of Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/weve-just-signed-the-worlds-biggest-trade-deal-but-what-exactly-is-the-rcep-150082

Business News

The Hidden Reason Startups Rush Towards Content Marketing Support

Melbourne has become a place where new companies try bold ideas and move fast, and in this busy scene, many of them turn to a content marketing agency in Melbourne for the push they need. Many early-s...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Nutifood Partners With GippsNature for First Product Launch, Eyeing Global Growth

The Victorian Government delegation joined discussions during the visit The first GippsNature product signals a new chapter in Vietnam - Australia dairy ties. A New Cross-Border Dairy Initiative ...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

5 Tips for Maintaining Outdoor Furniture in Rentals

Think outdoor furniture is low-maintenance? Tell that to the sun, the rain, and the occasional possum that decides to test it out. If you’re managing a property, that outdoor setup isn’t just for sho...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Speed Dating For Business
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink หวยออนไลน์pusulabetสล็อตเว็บตรงgamdom girişpadişahbetMostbetvbetpusulabetcarros usadospin updizipalStreameastultrabetenjoybet girişcocktail glassesstarzbetpusulabetcasibompusulabetjojobet girişpalacebetbets10holiganbetholiganbetjojobetdizi izleholiganbetnakitbahisHoliganbet 1172jojobetjojobetmatbetprimebahis1xbet girişjojobetGrandpashabetenjoybetpalacebetgobahisjustintvjojobet girişgiftcardmall/mygiftpadişahbetcasibomZBAHİS 2025bets10markajbetselçuksportscasibommeritkingbetsmovematadorbetcasibomcasibomJojobetjustin tvjustintvcasibom girişsweet bonanzaselçuksportsromabet girişcasibom girişcasibomromabetromabetmeritbetMarsbahisVdcasinomeritking girişVdcasinoDinamobetaresbetCasibomizmir escort kizSekabetpadişahbetnorabahisgoogleselcuksportspaşacasinomeritkingbetciogalabetgalabetgalabetbetzulasonbahissonbahissahabet girişcasibomCasibom girişcolor pickerbets10gobahiszbahiscolor pickerholiganbetmatbet girişvaycasinovaycasino girişpadişahbetbetsmove girişgalabet girişคลิปหลุดไทยCasibomcasibomvaycasino girişcasibommeritbetonwinizmir escortgalabetAlanya escortpadişahbetjojobetmarsbahisbahsegelhiltonbetpadişahbetgrandbettingbetnanoultrabetbetnanobets10justintvRoyal Reelsroyal reelspadişahbetnorabahisBetkolikAntalya EscortjojobetJojobettürk ifşa izleNişantaşı EscortnorabahispadişahbetbettiltCrackstreamscasibomKalebetCasibomfixbetsweet bonanzatimebettimebettimebet