First,
the “official version” and then a press release from Dr. Jane
Kelsey
Japanese bid for TPP important - Joyce
The
acting Trade Minister, Steven Joyce, says Japan's bid to be part of
the Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations is important, as countries
move towards completing an agreement by the end of the year.
Radio
NZ,
16
March, 2013
The
agreement, known as TPP, is a free trade deal being negotiated by
eleven countries including New Zealand, the United States and
Australia.
Japan
wants to be the 12th country.
Mr
Joyce says Japan is New Zealand's fourth largest trading partner, and
any removal of trade barriers as part of the agreement could be
hugely beneficial to New Zealand.
Mr
Joyce says TPP ministers will want to discuss the next steps
regarding Japan when they meet next month as part of the APEC Trade
Ministers meeting in Indonesia.
Terms
of Japan's entry to TPPA talks bad news for NZ
Press
Release: Professor Jane Kelsey
|
15
March 2013
For
immediate release:
Terms
of Japan's entry to TPPA talks bad news for NZ, ‘surrender of
sovereignty’ for Japan
‘Japan’s
Prime Minister Abe will announce this afternoon that Japan will seek
to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement (TPPA) negotiations.
He already has US endorsement to do so’, says Professor Jane Kelsey
who has just returned from observing the Singapore round of the
talks.
Several
days ago Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party cleared the way for the
announcement. However, the Party’s resolution
also called for Japan to maintain tariffs on key farm products,
especially rice, wheat, beef, dairy products and sugar, and defend
the public health insurance system.
Yesterday,
current and recent members of the Diet (Parliament) who have been
campaigning against the agreement for several years released an open
letter to Abe that said Japan would have to accept any text that was
agreed by the time they joined the negotiations, sight unseen.
The
letter objected that the denial of 'any right or opportunity to set
the terms or to alter terms that undermine the national interests of
Japan’ was ‘a fundamental surrender of sovereignty’.
They
also revealed that the US Trade Representative had told other chief
negotiators they needed to complete their bilateral pre-entry
discussions with Japan and approve its entry by July. [An English
translation of the complete text is below]
Once
a 90-day notification period to the US Congress expired Japan would
be able to join the talks in September, one month before the
political leaders of the existing eleven countries hope to sign the
completed deal.
‘If
this is true, the US has effected a double play on New Zealand’,
said Professor Kelsey.
Trade
Minister Groser said New Zealand would welcome Japan’s
participation ‘once we have established procedures for their entry
that are acceptable to their governments and to ours’. That was
widely taken to mean Japan’s agreement to comprehensive
agricultural liberalisation in line with the statement of the TPPA
leaders in Honolulu in November 2011.
Australia
has been trying unsuccessfully to achieve that goal in a free trade
negotiation with Japan since 2007.
New
Zealand would have just over three months to get Japan to agree or
give way to a timeframe that appears to have been imposed
unilaterally by the US.
'Even
if Japan agrees in principle to consider opening dairy market access,
that is just the first step in the process', according to Professor
Kelsey.
‘Assuming
the US continues to delay any substantial discussion of dairy market
access to its own markets until September, the US and Japan could
then join forces in demanding flexibility and stymie the one gain
that New Zealand government has said is a bottom line and without
which it will walk away from the TPPA’.
--
Dear
PM Abe,
It
has been widely reported that this week you will announce a formal
decision to join negotiations to establish a Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) free trade agreement.
We
recognized the terms under which other countries, namely Mexico and
Canada, have joined TPP negotiations were grossly unfair.
Effectively, terms were dictated to these nations, which were told
either they could comply or not join the talks.
In
particular, these entrants were required to agree that they would not
seek to reopen any matters that had already been agreed to during the
previous three years of negotiations. Further, they were forbidden
from offering new proposals with respect to the numerous subjects
that had already been decided.
In
sum, they were told that if they wanted to join TPP talks, they would
be required to simply agree to all of the expansive terms negotiated
by the other countries in any of the agreement’s 29 chapters of
binding rules.
All
of Japan’s current and future domestic laws, regulations and
administrative procedures would be required to conform with these
rules established by other countries. In addition to trade in goods,
including agriculture, these rules would severely limit Japan’s
regulation of a wide range of sensitive matters such as foreign
investors, postal, banking, insurance, energy, telecommunications,
medicine approvals and prices, food and product safety, and more.
In
addition, the newly entering parties were denied access to the
confidential negotiating texts that they were being required to
accept. That means that they were required to agree to accept texts
that they could not review in advance to assess the implications for
their countries. Instead, they were required to rely solely on
whatever informal assurances they had received from other TPP parties
with respect to what the texts would require.
We
understand that at the March Singapore Round of TPP negotiations,
U.S. trade officials informed other countries’ TPP negotiators of a
process by which Japan would be allowed to join the agreement. U.S.
officials have indicated that Japan has agreed to the same
disrespectful, unfair process imposed on Mexico and Canada for
accession to the TPP. The U.S. instructed the other TPP countries to
complete their bilateral consultations with Japan by July.
Japan
would be allowed to join an agreement that has been negotiated by
other countries, without any right or opportunity to set the terms or
to alter terms that undermine the national interests of Japan. This
is a fundamental surrender of sovereignty.
If
Japan is about to announce its desire to enter these negotiations, we
are seeking your assurance that Japan will not be required to comply
with the unacceptable process imposed on Canada and Mexico. We ask
you state publicly the process that Japan will follow and the terms
that have been agreed with the other TPP negotiating parties and to
table a written assurance to this effect in the Diet.
March
13, 2013
National
Coalition for Commenting on TPP
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.