Precedent
shows that small countries do not get their interests included in
“trade” agreements with the Empire
My hunch is the government would be forced to sign an agreement without dairy provision. This is how America treats smaller countries.
Dairy
access stalled as TPP talks get more serious
22
June, 2015
The
Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact does not yet include an
acceptable deal on access for New Zealand's most important exports,
dairy products, with little more than a month to go before the
controversial 12- nation trade deal could be concluded.
"I
think the way I would describe it is there's a deal.
"It's
probably not at the level that we would currently like," said
Prime Minister John Key at his post-Cabinet press conference.
He
was referring to comments last week by Trade Minister Tim Groser that
negotiations on dairy access to the heavily protected United States,
Canadian and Japanese markets had "barely started".
A
vote is due in the US Senate as early as mid-week to grant fast-track
negotiating authority to US President Barack Obama to conclude the
deal after a crucial vote in the Congress last Thursday left the
Senate as the final hurdle.
Key
took issue with Groser's comments to BusinessDesk last week that
there was so far no deal on dairy products.
"It's
not to say that there's a bad deal on dairy products, it's more to
say that there's no deal," Groser said last week.
"We've
barely started. Phony negotiating positions have been put on the
table but that doesn't help a professional negotiator make a judgment
as to where the landing zone is."
However,
Key said: "From what I've seen at the moment, if in theory we
froze time and concluded the deal as I see it, it's net positive for
New Zealand.
"But
it wouldn't be doing enough for dairy for us to be comfortable and we
would like to do some more there.
"There
are a lot of other sectors that would be very happy about it."
Key
said his gut instinct was that the Senate would follow the US
Congress, which by a narrow vote last week approved Obama's so-called
"fast-track" authority to negotiate a conclusion to the TPP
deal.
"We'll
eventually get the chance to potentially get a deal before the summer
recess."
Conventional
wisdom among TPP negotiators is that the 12-nation deal, covering 40
per cent of world trade, must be agreed by the end of July so that it
doesn't drag beyond the US summer break in August, after which the
country's politics are likely to become dominated by jockeying for
position ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
"It's
not straightforward," said Key.
"You've
still got people in the Senate who might vote against, but my gut
instinct is it's very important to President Obama and they'll do
their best to get there."
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